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Worries May Raise Men’s Heart Risks

Feb 02, 2022
Worries May Raise Men’s Heart Risks
Worrying can take a toll on your psyche, but new research suggests that when middle-aged men fret too much, they face a higher risk for developing diabetes, heart disease or stroke down the road.

Worrying can take a toll on your psyche, but new research suggests that when middle-aged men fret too much, they face a higher risk for developing diabetes, heart disease or stroke down the road.

And this increase in risk is on par with the health risks linked to heavy drinking, the findings showed.

“Our findings suggest that anxiety is linked to unhealthy biological processes that pave the way to developing heart disease and diabetes in men,” a study from Boston University School of Medicine and the National Center for Post-traumatic Stress Disorder of the VA Boston Healthcare System reported.

Taking steps to improve mental health may help lower risks for heart disease and diabetes, the study reported.

The study included more than 1,550 men (aged 53, on average), who took part in the Normative Aging Study. These men didn’t have any major diseases at the beginning of the study. The researchers looked at seven biological risk factors — including blood pressure, cholesterol, blood fats known as triglycerides, body mass index, blood sugar and a marker for inflammation — every three to five years until the men died or dropped out of the study.

A risk was considered elevated if the test results were higher than cut-off points in national guidelines, or the men were taking medication to control it. Men received one point for each elevated risk factor. They also answered standard questionnaires that measure anxiety and worry when the study began.

Men who reported higher levels of anxiety had a 10 percent to 13 percent greater chance of reaching high biological risk for heart disease, stroke or diabetes during the 40-year follow-up period, the researchers found.

The study wasn’t designed to say how worry and anxiety increase risks for disease, but worriers were more likely to smoke, consume alcohol and not exercise regularly.

“Psychosocial factors related to anxiety, such as a stronger tendency to interpret even neutral situations as stressful or to avoid uncomfortable situations, may mean that anxious individuals are less adept in coping with stressors and at greater risk for poor mental health in general, which can, in turn, increase disease risk,” the study reported.

Anxious men had a greater number of high-risk factors at all ages, and these findings held even after researchers controlled for other known risks for heart disease, such as family history.

These risks preceded the diagnosis of any disease, suggesting a window of opportunity for prevention, the study reported. For example, it’s possible to catch blood pressure as it starts creeping up and intervene with lifestyle changes before it turns into full-fledged high blood pressure.

The study did have its share of limitations. The researchers didn’t have data on whether men were diagnosed with an anxiety disorder. In addition, participants were all male and nearly all white, so the findings may not be generalizable to other groups.