Based on more than a decade and a half of medical and weather data,
researchers linked an increased incidence of heart attacks to lower
air temperatures, lower atmospheric pressure, higher wind velocity
and shorter durations of sunshine, according to the report in JAMA
Cardiology.
What's unique about the new study, said its senior author, is that
"all heart attacks occurring in a whole country have been followed
for 16 years with weather data for the day the heart attack
occurred."
Dr. David Erlinge, head of cardiology at Lund University and Skane
University Hospital in Sweden, told Reuters Health, "We had data on
more than 280,000 heart attacks and 3 million weather data points."
Erlinge and his colleagues pored over records from the SWEDEHEART
registry, which enrolls all consecutive patients in Sweden with
symptoms suggestive of a heart attack who are admitted to a coronary
intensive care unit or a coronary catheterization lab. The registry
contains a wealth of health information on patients, including age,
body mass, smoking status, echocardiogram findings, interventions,
discharge medications and diagnoses.
For meteorological data, the researchers turned to the SMHI, a
Swedish government agency that registers data from 132 weather
stations across the nation.
Erlinge and colleagues analyzed the weather and heart attack data
from 1998 through 2013 for 274,029 patients, half of whom were aged
71 or older.
While lower air temperature, lower atmospheric air pressure, higher
wind velocity and shorter sunshine duration all were associated with
statistically meaningful increased risk of heart attack, the most
pronounced effect was from temperature.
The researchers found a higher incidence of heart attack on days
with air temperatures below freezing. The rates of heart attack
declined when temperatures rose to more than 3 to 4 degrees Celsius,
or 37.4 to 39.2 degrees Fahrenheit.
Overall, each temperature increase of 7.4 degrees Celsius (about 13
degrees F) was tied to a 2.8 percent decrease in heart attack risk,
the study authors calculated.
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The new findings are "an association we talk about frequently and
it's been suggested in studies before this as well," said Dr. Nisha
Jhalani of the Center for Interventional Vascular Therapy at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia
University Irving Medical Center in New York City.
"One thing that's interesting about this study is that they didn't
just look at temperatures. They looked at a number of other factors,
such as sunshine hours and wind velocity. It's also a nationwide
study with a lot of patients," said Jhalani, who wasn't involved in
the research.
So, why would cold temperatures raise the risk of heart attack?
"Colder temperatures increase vasoconstriction in the arteries which
causes them to clamp down," she explained. "In someone with 70 to 80
percent blocked arteries - which might not be causing any symptoms
normally - the arteries can be clamped down enough that the blood
supply doesn't match demand."
Cold can also increase clotting, Jhalani added.
There are other factors related to winter that can increase the risk
of heart attacks, such as shoveling snow, which raises blood
pressure to levels that could disturb vulnerable plaques, Jhalani
said. And caffeine has a similar clamping down effect on arteries,
albeit a lot smaller.
"So the worst thing you can do is go out in subzero temperatures,
shovel snow, and then come in and drink coffee to warm up," Jhalani
said. "That can be the perfect storm."
The best strategy to minimize the increased risk brought on by cold
weather is to "dress appropriately," Erlinge said in an email. "If
you are at high risk (of a heart attack), you may want to avoid
going out in really cold, windy weather. Or maybe move to a warmer
climate."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2D2yLkk JAMA Cardiology, online October 24,
2018.
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