The Surprising Symptom That Raises Stroke and Heart Attack Risk
Paying attention to a common, highly treatable, but often
overlooked symptom could help doctors more easily identify people at increased
risk for heart attacks and strokes, two new large studies suggest.
This symptom—frequent daytime drowsiness brought on by sleep
problems—is so ubiquitous that many people don’t recognize it as a potential
health threat that warrants discussion with their medical provider, says Amy
Doneen, ARNP, medical director of the Heart Attack &
Stroke Prevention Center in Spokane, WA.
The new research may help solve
a medical mystery: Why heart attacks and strokes frequently occur in people
without conventional risk factors. Only about half of strokes can be explained
by such well-established risks as smoking, high blood pressure, obesity, and
diabetes, according to a new study published in PLOS Medicine.
That’s prompted intensive research into other potentially
preventable factors that may boost the
risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), such as insomnia and other sleep
disorders. Here’s a closer look at why
you should take fatigue and trouble sleeping seriously—and what to do about it.
Insomnia Can Increase
Stroke Risk by 8x
People with insomnia have a 54 percent higher risk for
stroke, compared to those without this disorder, according to a study published
in the
American Heart Association journal Stroke.
Young people with this sleep problem were in far greater
peril, with the researchers reporting that 18-to-34-year-old insomniacs were
more than eight times more likely to suffer a stroke than people the same age
who sleep normally.
The researchers tracked 21,438 initially healthy insomniacs
and 64,314 non-insomniacs during a four-year period.
The study is the first to report that trouble sleeping elevates stroke
risk and also found that people with persistent insomnia face a greater threat
than those who had been successfully treated for the condition.
“What our study adds to the field is that insomnia should also
be considered as one of the risk factors of stroke, especially among young
adults,” study author Ya-Wen Hsu, an assistant professor at Chia Nan University
of Pharmacy and the department of medical research at Chi-Mei Medical Center in
Taiwan, told FoxNews.com.
Daytime Drowsiness
Linked to Higher Rates of Heart Disease
Women who frequently feel drowsy during the daytime have a
58 percent higher risk for CVD, the leading killer of Americans, compared to
those who are rarely or never experience this symptom, according to an analysis
published in the journal Sleep Medicine.
About 20 percent of adults suffer from chronic daytime
sleepiness—inability to stay awake and alert during waking hours—resulting in
dozing off or drowsiness. This symptom has been linked to cognitive impairment,
car accidents, medical errors, and elevated heart disease risk in earlier
studies.
The researchers analyzed data from 84,003 participants in
the long-running Nurses’ Health Study. At the start of the study, the women
were between the ages of 37 and 54. Participants were tracked for eight years,
during which 500 cases of heart disease or stroke occurred.
Why Insomnia and Heart Problems Are Linked
Several previous studies have also found links between
slumber problems and CVD danger. For example, a 2012 analysis pooled results from five prior studies with 8,435
participants and found that obstructive sleep apnea—a sleep disorder
marked by loud snoring and interruptions in breathing—more than doubles stroke
risk.
There are several key reasons why people who don't catch
enough zzzs due to insomnia or sleep disorders are more likely to suffer heart
attacks and strokes, explains James Gangrich, Ph.D., author of the Nurse’s
Health Study analysis discussed above. These factors include:
Higher blood
pressure. During normal sleep, blood pressure typically drops by 10 to
20 percent, compared to the level when you’re awake, says Gangrich. “Therefore,
people who don’t get the normal amount of sleep—about seven to nine hours a night—have
higher average blood pressure over a 24-hour period.” High blood pressure is
the leading risk factor for stroke and one of the major risks for heart attack.
Insulin resistance
(the disorder that leads to type 2 diabetes). “In sleep deprivation
studies, previously healthy people have such a dramatic change in their insulin
levels that they temporarily become pre-diabetic,” reports Doneen, coauthor of Beat
the Heart Attack Gene. “Studies also suggest that insulin resistance is
one of the culprits in up to 70 percent of heart attacks,” she reports.
Increases in hunger
hormones. Skimping on shuteye has a powerful effect on levels of the
appetite-regulating hormones ghrelin and leptin. “As a result, sleep-deprived
people tend to crave sugary and salty snacks, both of which are high in
calories,” notes Gangrich. That can lead to packing on excess pounds, which in
turn is a risk factor for heart disease and diabetes (a disease that further
increases risk for heart attacks and strokes).
Increased
inflammation. Insufficient slumber can also contribute to arterial
inflammation, upping the threat of both developing CVD in the first place and
suffering cholesterol plaque ruptures that could trigger a heart attack or
stroke, adds Doneen.
What should you do if
you can’t sleep?
Gangrich emphasizes that daytime drowsiness doesn’t cause
heart attacks or strokes, but for a variety of reasons, is linked to other
factors that may elevate risk, such as insufficient sleep, obesity, diabetes,
high blood pressure, or high cholesterol.
While his study found that daytime fatigue is not an
independent risk factor for heart disease, it concluded that, “Getting sufficient quality sleep on a
regular basis may represent a lifestyle practice that contributes to the
prevention of CVD.”
Both Gangrich and Doneen suggest consulting your medical
provider if you have persistent insomnia, daytime fatigue or other sleep
issues. In some cases, a sleep study may be recommended to help diagnose the
problem.
Often simple lifestyle changes, such as getting more
exercise, avoiding late night computer use, relaxing bedtime rituals, and
having a regular sleep schedule, can help you get a better night’s rest.
Pradeep Shukla
PGDM 2 sem
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