Anger and Arteries
By AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION
Brief anger can temporarily impair blood vessel function, potentially heightening heart disease and stroke risks, finds new study in the Journal of the American Heart Association.
- When adults became angry after remembering past experiences, the
function of cells lining the blood vessels was negatively impaired, which
may restrict blood flow. Previous research has found that this may
increase the risk of heart disease and stroke.
- In this study, episodes of anxiety and sadness did not trigger the
same change in functioning of the blood vessel lining.
A brief
episode of anger triggered by remembering past experiences may negatively
impact the blood vessels’ ability to relax, which is essential for proper blood
flow, according to new research published today in the Journal of the American Heart Association, an open
access, peer-reviewed journal of the American Heart Association.
Previous research has found that impairment of
blood vessels’ ability to relax may increase the risk of developing
atherosclerosis, which may, in turn, increase the risk of heart disease and
stroke.
“Impaired vascular function is linked to an increased risk of heart attack and stroke,” said lead study author Daichi Shimbo, M.D., a professor of medicine at the Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York City. “Observational studies have linked feelings of negative emotions with having a heart attack or other cardiovascular disease events. The most common negative emotion studied is anger, and there are fewer studies on anxiety and sadness, which have also been linked to heart attack risk.”
In this study, the researchers investigated whether negative emotions — anger, sadness and anxiety — may have an adverse impact on blood vessel function compared to a neutral emotion.
The 280 adults in the study were randomly assigned to one of four emotional tasks for 8 minutes: recalling a personal memory that made them angry; recalling a personal memory of anxiety; reading a series of depressing sentences that evoked sadness; or repeatedly counting to 100 to induce an emotionally neutral state.
This protocol, “Putative mechanisms Underlying
Myocardial infarction onset and Emotions (PUME),” was described by the
researchers in a previous paper.
Researchers
assessed the cells lining each study participant’s blood vessels before the
tasks and at several points after, looking for evidence of impaired blood
vessel dilation, increased cell injury and/or reduced cell repair capacity. The
measurements taken before the emotional tasks were repeated after tasks were
completed.
Measurements
were taken for each participant at baseline (0 minutes) and at four different
time points after experiencing the assigned emotional task: 3 minutes, 40
minutes, 70 minutes and 100 minutes. The analysis found:
- Tasks that recalled past events causing anger led to an impairment
in blood vessel dilation, from zero to 40 minutes after the task. The
impairment was no longer present after the 40-minute mark.
- There were no statistically significant changes to participants’
blood vessel linings at any time points after experiencing the anxiety and
sadness emotional tasks.
“We saw
that evoking an angered state led to blood vessel dysfunction, though we don’t
yet understand what may cause these changes,” Shimbo said. “Investigation into
the underlying links between anger and blood vessel dysfunction may help
identify effective intervention targets for people at increased risk of
cardiovascular events.”
According
to an American Heart Association 2021 scientific statement, Psychological Health,
Well-Being, and the Mind-Heart-Body Connection, mental
well-being can positively or negatively impact a person’s health and risk
factors for heart disease and stroke.
“This
study adds nicely to the growing evidence base that mental well-being can
affect cardiovascular health, and that intense acute emotional states, such as
anger or stress, may lead to cardiovascular events,” said Glenn Levine, M.D.,
FAHA, writing committee chair of the scientific statement, and master clinician
and professor of medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, and chief of the
cardiology section at the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center, both in
Houston.
“For instance, we know that intense sadness or similar emotions are a common trigger for Takatsubo cardiomyopathy, and events such as earthquakes or even as a fan watching a world soccer match, which provoke stress, may lead to myocardial infarction and/or to arrhythmias.
"This current study very eloquently shows how anger can negatively impact
vascular endothelial health and function, and we know the vascular endothelium,
the lining of blood vessels, is a key player in myocardial ischemia and
atherosclerotic heart disease. While not all the mechanisms on how
psychological states and health impact cardiovascular health have been
elucidated, this study clearly takes us one step closer to defining such
mechanisms.”
Study
background and details:
- The Putative mechanisms Underlying Myocardial infarction onset and
Emotions (PUME) study is a randomized controlled experimental study
conducted from August 2013 to May 2017.
- Participants were recruited from the community surrounding Columbia
University Irving Medical Center in New York City.
- Participants were ages 18 or older and healthy. In this study,
healthy was defined as no history of heart disease, stroke, bypass surgery
or stents, transient ischemic attack, peripheral arterial disease, heart
failure, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, Type 2 diabetes or
self-reported diagnosis of a mental health disorder; not taking any
prescription medications or dietary supplements; and not currently
smoking.
- The average age of study participants was 26 years. Approximately
50% of participants self-identified as women. About 40% of participants
self-identified as white adults; 29% as Hispanic/Latino adults; 19% as
Asian adults; and 14% as Black adults.
- Participants’ blood vessel health was assessed before and after
completing the emotional tasks with finger probes that detect changes in
blood flow in arteries.
- Before completing the emotional tasks, participants were seated in a
comfortable chair in a temperature-controlled room and instructed to relax
for 30 minutes, during which time they were not allowed to talk, use their
phones, read any documents or sleep.
- After the participants had relaxed for 30 minutes, researchers
measured participants’ blood pressure with a cuff and corresponding heart
rate. Two blood pressure measurements were taken one minute apart, then
the dilation of participants’ blood vessels was measured, and blood
samples were collected for testing. Repeat measurements of blood pressure
and dilation were conducted, and blood samples were collected again after
the assigned emotional task was completed.
- Researchers determined the extent to which participants’ blood
vessels were unable to dilate by measuring the blood flow in the
participants’ non-dominant forearm. They assessed the injury to
participants’ blood vessels by counting the number of circulating blood
vessel lining biomarkers in the blood and assessed the regenerative
ability of participants’ vascular cells by measuring their circulating
levels of bone-marrow-derived cells, which are essential for repair.
The
study’s limitations included that participants were young and apparently
healthy, “making it unclear whether the results would apply to older adults
with other health conditions, who would most likely be taking medications,”
Shimbo noted. In addition, participants were observed in a health care setting,
rather than in real-world situations, and the study only assessed the
short-term effects of evoked emotions.
Reference:
1 May 2024, Journal of the American Heart Association.
DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.123.0326981