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Hostility and Heart Disease

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Hostility and Heart Disease

Study focuses on ages 18 to 30. By Dr. Brian P. McDonough.

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If you are young and have a hot temper, or are someone who is very angry and hostile, you are at greater risk of having heart problems down the road. This is according to the recent study in the journal of the American Medical Association. The study looked at 374 white and black, men and women between the ages 18 and 30. They were followed over 10 years and among other things the coronary arteries were studied to see if they were calcified.

Those people who had hostility levels measured above average, by a true or false test, were nine times more likely to have calcified arteries. You might be wondering why calcified arteries are important. When the blood vessels that supply the heart have blockages, there is an increased risk of heart attack. The study shows increased risk at an early age.

I am Dr. Brian Mc Donough.

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More about this Topics

  • Don't Worry, Breathe Happy

  • Setting Realistic Goals

  • Laughter is the best medicine

  • Assertiveness

  • Change Is Inevitable

Other Topics

    • Mindfulness Matters
    • Depression in the Workplace - A Presentation for Human Resources, Managers and Supervisors
    • Understanding Resilience
    • Building Better Mental Health
    • Making a Change
    • Goal Setting for Personal and Professional Excellence (Part 2)
    • Grounding Techniques to Help Control Anxiety
    • Eco Anxiety: Everyday Strategies to Cope
    • Make Time for Hobbies and Leisure Activities
    • Being Happy
    • Taking time to recharge
    • Check, challenge and change your thoughts
    • Anger
    • Deflate the Pressure
    • Optimism and Recuperation