Mittleman M A, Maclure M, Sherwood J B, Mulry R P, Tofler G H, Jacobs S C, Friedman R, Benson H, Muller J E
Department of Medicine, Deaconess Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass, USA.
Circulation. 1995 Oct 1;92(7):1720-5. doi: 10.1161/01.cir.92.7.1720.
Many anecdotes and several uncontrolled case series have suggested that emotionally stressful events, and more specifically, anger, immediately precede and appear to trigger the onset of acute myocardial infarction. However, controlled studies to determine the relative risk of myocardial infarction after episodes of anger have not been reported.
We interviewed 1623 patients (501 women) an average of 4 days after myocardial infarction. The interview identified the time, place, and quality of myocardial infarction pain and other symptoms, the estimated usual frequency of anger during the previous year, and the intensity and timing of anger and other potentially triggering factors during the 26 hours before the onset of myocardial infarction. Anger was assessed by the onset anger scale, a single-item, seven-level, self-report scale, and the state anger subscale of the State-Trait Personality Inventory. Occurrence of anger in the 2 hours preceding the onset of myocardial infarction was compared with its expected frequency using two types of self-matched control data based on the case-crossover study design. The onset anger scale identified 39 patients with episodes of anger in the 2 hours before the onset of myocardial infarction. The relative risk of myocardial infarction in the 2 hours after an episode of anger was 2.3 (95% confidence interval, 1.7 to 3.2). The state anger subscale corroborated these findings with a relative risk of 1.9 (95% confidence interval, 1.3 to 2.7). Regular users of aspirin had a significantly lower relative risk (1.4; 95% confidence interval, 0.8 to 2.6) than nonusers (2.9; 95% confidence interval, 2.0 to 4.1) (P < .05).
Episodes of anger are capable of triggering the onset of acute myocardial infarction, but aspirin may reduce this risk. A better understanding of the manner in which external events trigger the onset of acute cardiovascular events may lead to innovative preventive strategies aimed at severing the link between these external stressors and their pathological consequences.
许多轶事和一些非对照病例系列研究表明,情绪应激事件,尤其是愤怒,会紧接在急性心肌梗死发作之前并似乎触发其发作。然而,尚未有关于确定愤怒发作后心肌梗死相对风险的对照研究报告。
我们在心肌梗死后平均4天对1623例患者(501名女性)进行了访谈。访谈确定了心肌梗死疼痛及其他症状的时间、地点和性质,前一年愤怒发作的估计频率,以及心肌梗死发作前26小时内愤怒及其他潜在触发因素的强度和时间。通过发作愤怒量表(一种单项、七级的自我报告量表)和状态-特质人格问卷的状态愤怒分量表来评估愤怒。基于病例交叉研究设计,使用两种类型的自我匹配对照数据,将心肌梗死发作前2小时内愤怒的发生情况与其预期频率进行比较。发作愤怒量表确定了39例在心肌梗死发作前2小时内有愤怒发作的患者。愤怒发作后2小时内心肌梗死的相对风险为2.3(95%置信区间为1.7至3.2)。状态愤怒分量表证实了这些发现,相对风险为1.9(95%置信区间为1.3至2.7)。阿司匹林的常规使用者的相对风险(1.4;95%置信区间为0.8至2.6)显著低于非使用者(2.9;95%置信区间为2.0至4.1)(P < 0.05)。
愤怒发作能够触发急性心肌梗死的发作,但阿司匹林可能会降低这种风险。更好地理解外部事件触发急性心血管事件发作的方式,可能会带来旨在切断这些外部应激源与其病理后果之间联系的创新预防策略。