Singapore cardiologists have said that job or emotional stress is likely to increase risk of heart attack in otherwise healthy people
A Valentine Day warning has been issued by Singapore cardiologists who have said that job or emotional stress is likely to increase risk of heart attack in otherwise healthy people.
A study conducted by the National University Hospital (NUH) in Singapore, along with other cardiac centers, appeared to confirm what men have long suspected - that women's hearts break more easily.Women account for more than nine in 10 emotional heart attacks, according to the findings published in The Straits Times.
A 'heartbreak' attack is different from a regular heart attack, which is usually caused by blocked arteries that restrict blood flow to the rest of the body, the cardiologists said.
An attack induced by emotion or stress is triggered by a surge of hormones, which causes only the top part of the heart to contract, reducing blood flow. This phenomenon was first discovered by Japanese researchers in 2001.
When an angiogram reveals the cause, a balloon pump helps the heart push blood to the rest of the body.
Time can help the victims of heartbreak, physically as well as emotionally.
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'We have come across cases like this before, but we thought it was caused by a very small clot, which disintegrated,' senior cardiologist Tan Huay Cheem, one of the researchers, was quoted as saying.
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