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A test that measures the heart's
response to anger and mental stress may help identify people who are at
risk of having a heart attack, researchers report. Investigators found
that patients who reported higher levels of irritability/anger in response
to (a mental stress test) were also more likely to display ischemia --
a reduced oxygen supply to the heart muscle. Ischemia, which indicates
an increased risk of heart attack, is usually measured during physical
exertion on treadmill tests.
Most episodes of ischemia don't occur when people
are exercising. The likely culprit is mental stress, because people probably
spend more of their time mentally stressed than physically stressed. Overall,
the findings suggest that anger has to be thought of as a risk factor
for heart disease. The study included 160 men and 24 women who had heart
disease or had experienced a heart attack, and who underwent an exercise
stress test on a treadmill to measure levels of ischemia.
On a later visit, the subjects underwent two 5-minute
mental stress tests. In one test, subjects participated in a confrontational
role-playing game, and in the other they played a computerized word game.
People who reported high levels of anger or irritability during the role-playing
were more likely than others to have ischemia during the test.
This was mostly seen in the women in the study, not
the men, according to the report. However, the results do not necessarily
mean that men do not get as angry as women -- men just may be less likely
to admit that they are angry. Men often underestimate their anger when
talking with physicians, prompting many doctors to ask a spouse or other
family member about a male patient's anger. Teaching people how to control
their anger may help reduce the risk of heart attack.
Journal
of Health Psychology January2000;5:75-85.
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