by Playfuls Staff |
2nd January 2007

A higher level of symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder
may increase the risk of coronary heart disease in older men, according to a
report in the January issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry, one [more] of
the JAMA/Archives journals.
A link between stress and coronary heart disease (CHD) has
long been proposed. Numerous studies have found that cardiovascular disease and
its risk factors are more common among individuals with posttraumatic stress
disorder (PTSD), according to background information in the article. But to the
authors' knowledge, no prospective studies to date have examined PTSD in relation
to CHD risk.
Laura D. Kubzansky, Ph.D., of the Harvard School of Public
Health, Boston,
and colleagues conducted a prospective study to test the hypothesis that high
levels of PTSD symptoms may increase CHD risk, using two different measures of
PTSD (the Mississippi Scale for Combat-Related PTSD and the Keane PTSD scale).
The authors analyzed data on 1,946 men enrolled in the Veterans Affairs
Normative Aging Study. All the study subjects were community-dwelling men from
the Greater Boston area who served in the military. The authors looked for
incident (new cases) of coronary heart disease occurring during follow-up
through May 2001.
Using the Mississippi Scale for Combat-Related PTSD, the
authors found that for each increase in symptom level, the men had a 26 percent
increased risk for non-fatal heart attack and fatal CHD combined. They had a 21
percent increased risk for all CHD outcomes combined (non-fatal heart attack,
fatal CHD, and angina). The findings were replicated using the Keane PTSD scale.
"This pattern of effects suggests that individuals with
higher levels of PTSD symptoms are not simply prone to reporting higher levels
of chest pain or other physical symptoms but may well be at higher risk for
developing CHD," the authors write.
"These data suggest that prolonged stress and
significant levels of PTSD symptoms may increase the risk for CHD in older male
veterans," they conclude. "These results are provocative and suggest
that exposure to trauma and prolonged stress not only may increase the risk for
serious mental health problems but are also cardiotoxic."