Print

Print


Hearty laugh linked to healthy ticker

BALTIMORE (November 15, 2000 4:02 p.m. EST http://www.nandotimes.com) - A
team of Maryland medical researchers found that people with heart disease
were 40 percent less likely to laugh in humorous situations than those with
healthy hearts.

"The old saying that laughter is the best medicine definitely appears to be
true when it comes to protecting your heart," said Michael Miller, director
of the Center for Preventative Cardiology at the University of Maryland
Medical Center.

It is uncertain, however, whether humor helps prevent heart problems or if
people with heart problems tend to lose their senses of humor.

"That question would be more interesting, but it would also be much harder
to answer," said Dr. Rose Marie Robertson, a Vanderbilt University
cardiologist and president of the American Heart Association.

The research was to be presented Wednesday at a heart association
conference in New Orleans.

The study of 300 people -- half of whom had histories of heart problems --
used questionnaires to gauge how healthy people and those with heart
disease differed in their responses to situations where humor was expected.

The people with heart disease were much less likely to even recognize
humor. They also laughed less, even in positive situations, and generally
displayed more anger and hostility than people with healthy hearts.

"The ability to laugh -- either naturally or as learned behavior -- may
have important implications in societies such as the U.S., where heart
disease remains the No. 1 killer," Miller said.

Robertson said the Maryland research fits into an area of growing interest
among cardiologists: the psychological side of heart disease. Most of that
research, however, has examined the effects of mental stress on the human
heart or the tendency of heart patients to develop depression after surgery.

Very few studies have pondered the reverse question: whether humor, or a
pronounced absence of stress, can reduce a person's risk of heart disease.

Robertson called the Maryland researchers' line of questioning "a very
interesting" approach.

"I think what this suggests is that we have to take our patients'
psychological states more seriously," she said.


By DANIEL CUSICK, Associated Press
Copyright 2000 Nando
http://www.nandotimes.com/noframes/story/0,2107,500280008-500439367-50281836
3-0,00.html

janet paterson, an akinetic rigid subtype parkie
53 now /44 dx cd / 43 onset cd /41 dx pd / 37 onset pd
TEL: 613 256 8340 URL: http://www.geocities.com/janet313/
EMAIL: [log in to unmask] SMAIL: POBox 171 Almonte Ontario K0A 1A0 Canada