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Release Date: November 9, 1999
Contact:Joseph A. Boscarino, PhD, MPH
(201)
269-6328
joseph_boscarino@merck.com
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder May Result In Heart Disease
Combat veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) appear to be at higher risk
for coronary heart disease (CHD), according to a recent study of 4,462 male U.S. Army
veterans who served during the Vietnam War. The study results suggest that PTSD and other
types of severe psychological distress may actually cause heart disease. While the
relationship between severe stress exposures and heart disease has been confirmed in
animal studies, this association has been difficult to establish in human studies.
In this study, electrocardiogram (ECG) examinations detected a higher rate of heart
disorders, including evidence of past heart attacks, among Vietnam veterans who were
suffering from PTSD at the time of the study than among other veteran subjects. The ECGs
also showed that veterans who were experiencing depression or anxiety had a significantly
higher rate of heart problems as well. The findings held true even after controlling for
other factors, such as smoking history, drug abuse, alcohol consumption, income,
education, race, and age.
"We found a link between long-term, severe psychological distress and ECG results
that serve as clear markers for coronary heart disease," said study head Joseph
Boscarino, PhD, MPH, who was with the Department of Outcomes Research at Catholic Health
Initiatives in Louisville, Kentucky, at the time the research was conducted. "For
these men, combat exposure years ago in Vietnam was the principal reason for PTSD,
anxiety, and depression, but we believe that the results would be similar when looking at
the consequences of severe distress among other groups of people and within other
occupations."
"We believe that this research suggests a clear, definitive linkage between
exposure to severe stress and the onset of coronary heart disease in humans," said
Boscarino.
In the research, the 4,462 veterans studied received comprehensive medical and
psychiatric examinations and Board-certified cardiologists confirmed all the
Veterans' ECG results.
Abnormal ECG results showed up in 28 percent of the veterans with PTSD, 24 percent of
the veterans with depression, and 22 percent of the veterans with anxiety. Fifteen percent
of all of the veterans studied had abnormal results.
Approximately 30 percent of male veterans are known to have developed PTSD after
Vietnam service. The study's medical implications are important in the health care of
veterans who continue to suffer from PTSD as they age and will be afflicted both with the
consequences of severe stress and aging. The results of the research appear in the current
issue of Annals of Behavioral Medicine.
The research was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health and the Sisters of
Charity of Nazareth Health System in Louisville, Kentucky. Boscarino is now a senior
director in the Center for Outcomes Measurement and Performance Assessment with
Merck-Medco in Franklin Lakes, New Jersey.
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Annals of Behavioral Medicine is the official peer-reviewed publication
of The Society of Behavioral Medicine. For information about the journal, contact Arthur
Stone, PhD, 516-632-8833.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Director of Communications
202.387.2829
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