
The same might be true of women, but it's going to take further studies to be certain of that. Meanwhile, there's no downside to healthy anger management. Data came from 2,334 U.S. adults aged 48-67. They were followed for four to eight years during the 1990s.
Compared with less angry men, chronically angry men with prehypertension were moderately more likely to develop high blood pressure (hypertension) and heart disease during the study. The same wasn't true of women, perhaps because few women developed heart disease during the study, note Marty Player, MD, colleagues.
For men and women alike, long-term psychological stress was linked to heart disease.
The results didn't change when the researchers factored in participants' age, sex, race, smoking status, and LDL ("bad") cholesterol. However, Player's team couldn't control for every conceivable risk factor for heart disease.
Source : Player, M. Annals of Family Medicine, September/October 2007; vol 5: pp 403-411. News release, Annals of Internal Medicine.
For men and women alike, long-term psychological stress was linked to heart disease.
The results didn't change when the researchers factored in participants' age, sex, race, smoking status, and LDL ("bad") cholesterol. However, Player's team couldn't control for every conceivable risk factor for heart disease.
Source : Player, M. Annals of Family Medicine, September/October 2007; vol 5: pp 403-411. News release, Annals of Internal Medicine.
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