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Childhood Abuse Raises Heart Disease Risk

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http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsArticle.jhtml?type=healthNews & storyID=6284097 & secti\

on=news

 

Childhood Abuse Raises Heart Disease Risk

Mon 20 September, 2004 21:23

 

By Anthony J. Brown, MD

 

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A childhood involving abuse, neglect, and

household dysfunction increases the risk of heart disease in adulthood,

according to a report in the online issue of the journal Circulation:

Journal of the American Heart Association.

 

The link between these adverse childhood experiences and heart disease

seems to be mediated more by psychological factors than traditional risk

factors, lead author Dr. Maxia Dong, from the Centers for Disease

Control and Prevention, and colleagues note.

 

The findings are based on an analysis of survey data from 17,337 adult

health plan members collected between 1995 and 1997. Two weeks after

their medical history was recorded, the subjects were sent a

questionnaire regarding adverse childhood experiences and health-related

behaviors from adolescence through adulthood.

 

Of the 10 types of adverse childhood experiences investigated, 9 were

found to increase the risk of heart disease, the researchers report. The

increased risks ranged from 1.7-fold for emotional abuse and crime

within the household to 1.3-fold for emotional neglect and substance

abuse within the household. Parental marital discord was the only

adverse childhood experience not tied to an elevated risk of heart disease.

 

As the number of adverse childhood experiences increased, so did the

risk of heart disease. For example, the presence of just one adverse

childhood experience had a relatively mild effect on risk, whereas

having seven or more nearly quadrupled the risk compared with having none.

 

In general, psychological factors were stronger mediators of risk than

were traditional risk factors. With the exception of obesity, most

traditional factors did not double the risk of heart disease.

 

Heart disease cannot be looked at just in terms of risk factors in

middle life, Dong told Reuters Health. To assess the risk, " you really

need to go back to childhood. Adverse childhood experiences definitely

affect future health. "

 

SOURCE: Circulation, September 21, 2004.

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