Men Prone To Worry and Anxiety May Develop Heart Disease and Diabetes Risk Factors at Younger Ages
By AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION
- In
a long-term study of men in the U.S., more high-risk factors for heart
disease and Type 2 diabetes developed earlier in life among those who
reported more feelings of worry or feeling overwhelmed compared to those
with lower levels of worry.
- The
study’s results suggest that men prone to worry and anxiety may need to
pay extra attention to cardiometabolic disease risk factors, such as
maintaining a healthy weight and taking blood pressure or cholesterol
medicines, if needed.
- The
findings also raise the possibility that treating anxiety disorders may
lower cardiometabolic disease risk.
Middle-aged men who are anxious and worry more
may be at greater biological risk for developing heart disease, stroke, and
type 2 diabetes, also called cardiometabolic disease, as they get older,
according to new research published today in the Journal of the American Heart Association, an open
access journal of the American Heart Association.
“While the participants were primarily white men, our findings indicate higher levels of anxiousness or worry among men are linked to biological processes that may give rise to heart disease and metabolic conditions, and these associations may be present much earlier in life than is commonly appreciated – potentially during childhood or young adulthood,” said Lewina Lee, Ph.D., lead author of the study, an assistant professor of psychiatry at Boston University School of Medicine, and an investigator and clinical psychologist at the National Center for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, both in Boston.
To track the relationship between anxiety and cardiometabolic disease risk factors over
time, the investigators analyzed data on participants in the Normative Aging
Study, which is a longitudinal study of aging processes in men, founded at the
U.S. Veterans Affairs outpatient clinic in Boston in 1961. The study includes
both veterans and non-veterans. This analysis included 1,561 men (97% white),
who were an average age of 53 years in 1975. The men completed baseline
assessments of neuroticism and worry and did not have cardiovascular disease or
cancer at that time. A personality inventory assessed neuroticism on a scale of
0–9. In addition, a worry assessment tool asked how often they worried about
each of 20 items, with 0 meaning never and 4 meaning all the time.
“Neuroticism is a personality trait
characterized by a tendency to interpret situations as threatening, stressful
and/or overwhelming. Individuals with high levels of neuroticism are prone to
experience negative emotions – such as fear, anxiety, sadness and anger – more
intensely and more frequently,” said Lee. “Worry refers to our attempts at
problem-solving around an issue whose future outcome is uncertain and
potentially positive or negative. Worry can be adaptive, for example, when it leads
us to constructive solutions. However, worry can also be unhealthy, especially
when it becomes uncontrollable and interferes with our day-to-day functioning.”
After their baseline assessment, the men had
physical exams and blood tests every 3-5 years until they either died or
dropped out of the study. The research team used follow-up data through 2015.
During follow-up visits, seven cardiometabolic risk factors were measured:
systolic (top number) blood pressure; diastolic (bottom number) blood pressure;
total cholesterol; triglycerides; obesity (assessed by body mass index);
fasting blood sugar levels; and the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), a
marker of inflammation.
A risk factor for cardiometabolic disease was
considered in the high-risk range if the test results for the risk factor was
higher than the cut-point established by national guidelines, or if the
participant was taking any medicines to manage that risk factor (such as
cholesterol-lowering medications). Cut points for ESR as a risk factor are not
standardized, so the participant was ranked as high-risk if they were in the
top 25% of those tested. Each participant was assigned a risk factor count
score, one point for each of the seven risk factors classified as high-risk.
The men were then stratified based on whether they did or did not develop six
or more high-risk factors during the follow-up period.
“Having six or more high-risk cardiometabolic
markers suggests that an individual is very likely to develop or has already
developed cardiometabolic disease,” said Lee.
The researchers found:
- Between
ages 33 to 65, the average number of cardiometabolic high-risk factors
increased by about one per decade, averaging 3.8 risk-factors by age 65,
followed by a slower increase per decade after age 65.
- At
all ages, participants with higher levels of neuroticism had a greater
number of high-risk cardiometabolic factors.
- Higher
neuroticism was associated with a 13% higher likelihood of having six or
more cardiometabolic disease risk factors, after adjusting for demographic
characteristics (such as income and education) and family history of heart
disease.
- Higher
worry levels were associated with a 10% higher likelihood of having six or
more cardiometabolic disease risk factors after adjusting for demographic
characteristics.
“We found that cardiometabolic disease risk
increased as men aged, from their 30s into their 80s, irrespective of anxiety
levels, while men who had higher levels of anxiety and worry consistently had a
higher likelihood of developing cardiometabolic disease over time than those
with lower levels of anxiety or worry,” Lee said.
The researchers did not have data on whether
participants had been diagnosed with an anxiety disorder. Standard
evidence-based treatment for anxiety disorders includes psychotherapy or
medication, or a combination of the two.
“While we do not know whether treatment of
anxiety and worry may lower one’s cardiometabolic risk, anxious and worry-prone
individuals should pay greater attention to their cardiometabolic health. For
example, by having routine health check-ups and being proactive in managing
their cardiometabolic disease risk levels (such as taking medications for high
blood pressure and maintaining a healthy weight), they may be able to decrease
their likelihood of developing cardiometabolic disease,” said Lee.
It is unclear to what extent the results of this
analysis are generalizable to the public since the study participants were all
male and nearly all white. In addition, although participants were followed for
four decades, they were middle-aged when the study began.
“It would be important for future studies to
evaluate if these associations exist among women, people from diverse racial
and ethnic groups, and in more socioeconomically varying samples, and to
consider how anxiety may relate to the development of cardiometabolic risk in
much younger individuals than those in our study,” Lee said.
Reference: “Neuroticism, Worry, and
Cardiometabolic Risk Trajectories: Findings From a 40‐Year Study of Men” by Lewina
O. Lee, Kevin J. Grimm, Avron SpiroIII and Laura D. Kubzansky, 24 January
2022, Journal of the American Heart Association.
DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.121.022006
Co-authors are Kevin J. Grimm, Ph.D.; Avron
Spiro III, Ph.D.; and Laura D. Kubzansky, M.P.H., Ph.D. Authors’ disclosures
are listed in the manuscript.
The study was supported by the National
Institute on Aging and the National Center for Advancing Translational
Sciences, which are divisions of the National Institutes of Health.