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Tuesday, August 31, 2004 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M. Study links heart attacks and weather By Emma Ross
The study, presented yesterday at a conference of the European Society of Cardiology, is the first to document that variations in the weather increase the occurrence of heart attacks in people with high blood pressure. The two-year study, conducted by scientists at the University of Burgundy in France, examined 748 people admitted to hospitals with a heart attack. The researchers matched the hospital admissions with weather information covering the same period. Of those in the study, 50 percent were being treated for high blood pressure, or hypertension, or had at some time suffered from the condition. Overall, heart attacks were more frequent when the temperature dropped below 39.2 degrees Fahrenheit. However, a closer analysis revealed that this was true only for people who had high blood pressure. The number of heart attacks doubled among these people when the temperature dropped below that threshold. Heart attacks also went up in people with high blood pressure on days when the temperature dropped by more than 9 degrees, regardless of how cold it was. Blood pressure rises when it gets colder because blood vessels narrow to preserve body heat. The study highlights the special vulnerability that people with high blood pressure have to cold weather and underlines the importance of getting their blood pressure down to normal levels, said Dr. David Faxon, chief of cardiology at the University of Chicago and former president of the American Heart Association. Barometric pressure, or air pressure, was also an important influence on heart attacks in people with high blood pressure, the study found, but not in those with normal blood pressure. A shift of more than 8 points increased the chance of an attack, the investigators found. "A peak in [heart attack] onset in this population was observed at the passage of a cold front, but not a warm one," the study found. Cold fronts have denser air than warm fronts.
How the weather is linked to heart attacks is unclear, but several theories exist. One is that the inflammation caused by winter respiratory infections could make the blood vessels more vulnerable. Another is simply that the extra narrowing of the blood vessels is enough to trigger a heart attack.
The best protection, Ryden said, is to dress warmly when going out in the cold.
Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company
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