We’ve
all heard about people suffering or even dying from a broken heart, and assumed
it was a heart attack. But the American
heart Association suggest that broken
heart syndrome, also called stress-induced cardiomyopathy or takotsubo
cardiomyopathy, can strike even if you’re healthy. (Tako tsubo, by the way, are
octopus traps that resemble the pot-like shape of the stricken heart.)
Women
over 60 are more likely than men to experience the sudden, intense chest pain — the reaction to a surge of stress
hormones — that can be caused by an emotionally stressful event. It could be
the death of a loved one or even a divorce, breakup or physical separation,
betrayal or romantic rejection. It could even happen after a good shock (like
winning the lottery.)
Broken
heart syndrome may be misdiagnosed as a heart attack because the symptoms and test results
are similar. In fact, tests show dramatic changes in rhythm and blood
substances that are typical of a heart attack. But unlike a heart attack,
there’s no evidence of blocked heart arteries in broken heart syndrome.
In
broken heart syndrome, a part of your heart temporarily enlarges and doesn’t
pump well, while the rest of your heart functions normally or with even more
forceful contractions. Researchers are just starting to learn the causes, and
how to diagnose and treat it.
The Wall Street Journal recently noted that a new study
of 10 women who experienced the broken
heart syndrome found that their chest pain
was actually caused by a nervous system issue related to stress that
kept suffers from being able to calm down.
Now medical experts are suggesting that when people
experience chest pain brought about stressful situations these symptoms may subside
simply by using relaxation methods such as yoga and meditation.
But it would be a mistake to minimize the danger of
broken heart syndrome. The Wall Street
Journal notes that “There were 6,230 cases of people in the U.S. hospitalized
with broken heart syndrome in 2012.
Patients usually heal within days or weeks without residual damage to
the heart. But complications can occur as well as fatalities.”
This condition is most often treated with beta blockers
that control adrenaline flow that overwhelms the heart, but some medical
experts are questioning whether this is the best course of treatment.
In fact, The New England Journal of Medicine cited a study
that found that beta blockers “are not effective in preventing tokotsubo
cardiomyopathy.” Although there is some feeling that patients with hypertension
symptoms may have impacted the study results.
The bottom line is
that stress is a contributing factor to the broken heart syndrome. Experts recommend that when stress triggers
are reduced, it also reduces the potential for experiencing broken heart
syndrome.Richard Ueberfluss
www.assistinghands.com/hinsdale
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