Link Between Alcohol Consumption and Palpitations
Alcohol consumption triggers dangerous palpitations, say scientists.
Research from University of California San Francisco, builds on that finding, establishing a stronger causal link between alcohol consumption and serious palpitations in patients with atrial fibrillation, the most common form of arrhythmia (erratic heartbeats).
California researchers report that people with atrial fibrillation had almost a four and a half times greater chance of having an episode if they were consuming alcohol than if they were not, the American Journal of Cardiology reports.
"One of the remaining big unknowns is why or how this happens," said senior author Gregory Marcus, assistant professor of medicine at California, according to a California statement.
In the study, conducted from September 2004 to March 2011, researchers interviewed 223 patients with documented cardiac arrhythmia. They asked patients: "Does alcohol trigger your heart palpitations?" Participants ranked their symptoms on a scale from one to five (i.e. never, rarely, sometimes, frequently, and always).
"We defined 'yes' as frequently or always versus the rest of the responses," Marcus said, "and found that, after adjusting for potential confounders, atrial fibrillation patients had statistically significant greater odds of reporting that alcohol would trigger their symptoms."
The mean age of the study participants was 59 years. Eighty percent were Caucasian; 11 percent were Asian; five percent Latino, and four percent declined to state their ethnicity in the atrial fibrillation group.
Source: IANS