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Now for all the caveats.
Researchers don't know how many men were childless by choice and not because of a fertility problem.
They don't know what fertility problems the men's partners may have had that could have left them childless.
They didn't have cholesterol or blood pressure information on the men -- key heart risk factors.
Less than 5 percent of participants were blacks or other minorities, so the results may not apply to them.
All those questions aside, however, some prominent heart experts were reassured by the study's large size and the steps researchers took to adjust for heart disease risk factors.
"I think there's something there," and social science supports the idea that children can lower heart risks, said Dr. Eric Topol, a cardiologist and genetics expert at Scripps Health in La Jolla, Calif. "Whether it's with a pet, a spouse or social interaction ... all those things are associated with better outcomes."
Dr. Daniel Rader, director of preventive cardiology at the University of Pennsylvania, said: "It's biologically plausible that there's a connection," but the reduced risk attributed to having children "is pretty modest."
Men often ask him what they can do to keep from dying of a heart attack, he said.
"I'm not really prepared to, on the basis of this, tell them to start having a few kids," Rader said.
___
Online:
Medical journal:
http://humrep.oxfordjournals.org/
content/early/recent
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