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Release Date: May 16, 2000
Contact: Laura Marshall
(510)
271-5826
High Hostility Level may Predispose Young Adults to Heart Disease
Cynical distrust also associated with presence of coronary calcium
CHICAGO -- High hostility levels are associated with coronary artery calcification in
young adults, according to an article in the May 17 issue of The Journal of the
American Medical Association (JAMA).
Carlos Iribarren, MD, MPH, PhD, from the Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program,
Oakland, Calif., and colleagues evaluated whether hostility, a previously reported
predictor of clinical coronary artery disease, is associated with coronary artery
calcification, which is a marker of subclinical atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries
before there are any symptoms). The study included 374 white and black men and women, aged
18 to 30 years at baseline measurement, who participated in the Coronary Artery Risk
Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study. There were follow-up examinations at five and
10 years after the baseline measurement. Hostility levels were measured by the Cook-Medley
scale, a test consisting of 50 true-false questions. Coronary artery calcification was
determined by electron-beam computed tomographic scans of the heart.
The researchers found that those subjects who had hostility scores above the median had
about 2.5 times the risk of having any coronary artery calcification than those with
scores below the median. Subjects who had hostility scores above the median also had nine
times (9.56) the risk of having high coronary calcification levels than those with scores
below the median. The association between hostility and calcification persisted after
adjusting for demographic, lifestyle and physiological variables. The authors also report
that cynical distrust, a subscale of hostility on the Cook-Medley test, was also
associated with the presence of coronary calcium, although to a lesser degree.
"This prospective cohort study suggests that high hostility levels may contribute
to early subclinical atherosclerotic coronary artery disease," the authors write.
"Clinical trials are needed to test whether reduction in hostile attitudes and
behaviors is an effective means of preventing atherosclerosis and thus ameliorating the
burden of coronary disease."
According to background information in the study, hostility is a personality and
character trait with attitudinal (cynicism and mistrust of others), emotional (anger) and
behavioral (overt and repressed aggression) components. In other studies, high hostility
levels have been related to increased risk of angiographically documented coronary
atherosclerosis, hypertension (high blood pressure), development of coronary artery
disease, and earlier death rates. According to the authors, several mechanisms have been
proposed to explain why hostility may increase cardiovascular risk, including unhealthful
lifestyle behaviors that are associated with hostility, such as smoking and alcohol use.
However, chemical and hormonal effects from hostility may also be involved.
Editor's Note: This work was supported by grants from the National Heart, Lung,
and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md.
Media Advisory: To contact Carlos Iribarren, MD, MPH, PhD, call Laura Marshall of
Kaiser Permanente at (510) 271-5826.
(Journal of the American Medical Association. 2000; 283: 2546-2551)
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If you would like to request a copy of the article, please call the
Science News Department at (312) 464-5374 or 5904. For more information, contact the
American Medical Association's Jim Michalski at (312) 464-5785 or e-mail Jim_Michalski@ama-assn.org.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Director of Communications
202.387.2829
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