You've heard it before: to avoid a heart attack don't smoke,
eat right and exercise. But it also may help to be happy, a
new study says.
Even if you're grumpy by nature, just try to be cheerful.
Researchers at Columbia University rated the happiness levels
of more than 1700 adults in Canada with no heart problems in
1995.
After a decade, they examined the 145 people who developed a
heart problem and found happier people were less likely to
have had one.
The study was published online today in the European
Heart Journal.
"If you aren't naturally a happy person, just try acting like
one," said Dr. Karina Davidson of Columbia University Medical
Center, the paper's lead author. "It could help your heart."
Davidson and colleagues used a five-point scale to measure
people's happiness. They then statistically adjusted to
account for things like age, gender, and smoking.
For every point on the happiness scale, people were 22
percent less likely to have a heart problem. The study was
paid for by the US National Institutes of Health and others.
Davidson said happy people were more likely to have a
healthier lifestyle.
It could also be there is an unknown genetic trait that
predisposes people to be happy and have less heart disease.
Other experts said happiness itself could result in a
healthier heart compared to other emotions such as stress or
depression.
Stress often releases hormones that can damage heart muscle.
Stress can also cause blood vessels to open too wide,
allowing plaque buildups to break off and clog the arteries,
according to Joep Perk, a professor of health sciences at
Sweden's Kalmar University and spokesman for the European
Society of Cardiology. Perk was not linked to the study.
"I often tell my patients not to get too depressed because
it's bad for your heart," Perk said. "You need time to
recharge your batteries or else your heart won't be able to
take it."
Depression has long been noted as a risk factor for heart
problems. Davidson said it was premature to draft guidelines
recommending patients boost their happiness levels just to
protect their hearts, even if it might help, until broader
studies now under way are completed. But she does recommend
trying to be happy for other reasons, like better mental
health.
"Anything that patients can do to increase the amount of
(happiness) in their lives will be helpful," she said, adding
there was a slight proviso.
"No smoking, eating unhealthy food, not exercising or
anything potentially damaging," she said. "That's the only
trick."
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