Known risk factors largely explain links between loneliness and first time heart disease/stroke
But social isolation still associated with death among those with preexisting cardiovascular disease
March 26, 2018
Science Daily/BMJ
Conventional risk factors largely explain the links observed between loneliness/social isolation and first time heart disease/stroke, a new study finds. But having few social contacts still remains an independent risk factor for death among those with pre-existing cardiovascular disease.
Recent research has increasingly highlighted links between loneliness and social isolation and cardiovascular disease and death. But most of these studies have not considered a wide range of other potentially influential factors, say the authors.
In a bid to clarify what role these other factors might have, they drew on data from nearly 480,000 people aged between 40 and 69, who were all part of the UK Biobank study between 2007 and 2010.
Participants provided detailed information on their ethnic background, educational attainment, household income, lifestyle (smoking, drinking, exercise) and depressive symptoms.
They were also asked a series of questions to gauge their levels of social isolation and loneliness. Height, weight, and grip strength were measured, and blood samples taken.
Their health was then tracked for an average of 7 years.
Nearly one in 10 (9%) respondents were deemed to be socially isolated, 6 percent lonely, and 1 percent both.
Those who were socially isolated and/or lonely were more likely to have other underlying long term conditions and to be smokers, while those who were lonely reported more depressive symptoms.
During the 7 year monitoring period, 12,478 people died. And 5731 people had a first time heart attack while 3471 had a first time stroke.
Social isolation was associated with a 43 percent higher risk of first time heart attack, when age, sex, and ethnicity were factored in.
But when behavioural, psychological, health, and socioeconomic factors were added into the mix, these factors accounted for most (84%) of the increased risk, and the initial association was no longer significant.
Similarly, social isolation was initially associated with a 39 percent heightened risk of a first time stroke, but the other conventional risk factors accounted for 83 percent of this risk.
Similar results were observed for loneliness and risk of first time heart attack or stroke.
But this was not the case for those with pre-existing cardiovascular disease among whom social isolation was initially associated with a 50 percent heightened risk of death. Although this halved when all the other known factors were considered, it was still 25 percent higher.
Similarly, social isolation was associated with a 32 percent heightened risk of death even after all the other conventional factors had been accounted for.
This is an observational study so no firm conclusions can be drawn about cause and effect, but the findings echo those of other research in the field, say the study authors.
And the size and representative nature of the study prompt the authors to conclude that their findings "indicate that social isolation, similarly to other risk factors such as depression, can be regarded as a risk factor for poor prognosis of individuals with cardiovascular disease."
This is important, they emphasise, as around a quarter of all strokes are recurrent, and targeting treatment of conventional risk factors among the lonely and isolated might help stave off further heart attacks and strokes, they suggest.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/03/180326213304.htm
Women's age at first menstrual cycle linked to heart disease risk
December 15, 2014
Science Daily/American Heart Association
The risk of heart disease, stroke and high blood pressure was significantly higher when menstruation began at age 10 or younger, or age 17 or older. First menstrual cycle at the age of 13 posed the lowest risk of heart disease, stroke and high blood pressure.
Researchers analyzed data collected from 1.3 million women aged 50 to 64 years old, who were mostly white. After over a decade of observation, those women who had their first menstrual cycle at the age of 13 had the least risk of developing heart disease, stroke, and high blood pressure.
Compared to women who had their first menstrual cycle at age 13, women with their first menstrual cycle at age 10 or younger, or age 17 or older, had up to:
- · 27 percent more hospitalizations or deaths due to heart disease;
- · 16 percent more hospitalizations or deaths from stroke; and
- · 20 percent more hospitalizations with high blood pressure, or deaths due to its complications.
"The size of our study, the wide range of ages considered, and the vascular diseases being examined made it unique and informative," said Dexter Canoy, M.D, Ph.D., study lead author and cardiovascular epidemiologist at the Cancer Epidemiology Unit, Nuffield Department of Population Health at the University of Oxford in the U.K.
"Childhood obesity, widespread in many industrialized countries, is linked particularly to early age at which the first menstrual cycle occurs. Public health strategies to tackle childhood obesity may possibly prevent the lowering of the average age of first menstrual cycle, which may in turn reduce their risk of developing heart disease over the long term."
The effect of age of the first occurrence of menstruation on heart disease was consistently found among lean, over-weight, and obese women, among never, past or current smokers, and among women in lower, middle, or higher socioeconomic groups.
For the majority of these women, however, their additional risk of developing a vascular disease was small. Of the million women, only four percent of them had their first menstrual cycle occurring at age 10 or younger, and only one percent at age 17 or older.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/12/141215185203.htm