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Tall, Dark, Handsome and Not Likely to Die of Heart Failure
Not long ago I passed a tall man in the grocery store and almost
stopped him to say, "Excuse me, you have a 24 percent lower risk for heart
failure because of your height." I consider a potential faux pas like this
an occupational hazard now that I have taken on the challenge of blogging
about hearts 29 days in a row during American Heart Month. It's true,
though, about the height thing. According to a recent report published in
the American Journal of Cardiology, men 6 feet tall and taller are 24
percent less likely than shorter men -- 5 feet 8 inches and shorter -- to
report a diagnosis of heart failure. Men in between those heights
experience proportional risks correlating to height.
Surprisingly, some news stories misrepresented the significance of the
findings -- lacking any mention of gravity's effect on the cardiovascular
system.
In this first study on the relationship between height and heart failure
there was no silver lining for shorter folks. The heart is the only muscle
in the body that never rests. Heart failure is when a heart is no longer
strong enough to pump blood through the body or doesn't relax sufficiently
between beats to do its job (Elizabeth Taylor was one of its most
notorious sufferers). Several previous studies, including Walker, et.
al.'s British Regional Heart study, had already found shorter people were
about twice as likely as taller people to experience heart attack, a
blockage of blood flow to the heart that results in the death of heart
muscle (also known as myocardial infarction).
Along with his colleagues, Principal Investigator for the Physicians'
Heart Study (PHS) Luc Djoussé, M.D., ScD. of Harvard Medical School and
Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston found that the taller the men, the
lower their odds of heart failure. The data were collected from 22,042
male doctors over a period of 22 years, beginning when most of the men
were in their early 50s. Statistical adjustments were made for
participants' weight, age, hypertension and for those with diabetes.
In plain language, gravity has major effects on the cardiovascular system
of an upright person and -- for reasons you will have to go to medical
school to understand -- gravity's effects are really great for tall people
and improve proportionately with height. More on sitting and sedentary
people on Day Two of this 29-day heart blog marathon.
Height is largely genetically determined but also sensitive to the effects
of socio-economic factors like poor nutrition or inadequate health care.
While the docs in the study may have had similar incomes as practicing
physicians, as children their social and economic backgrounds may have
differed significantly and contributed to heart risks later in life.
Djoussé suggests that childhood infections may also stunt growth and lead
to risk factors like high blood pressure and arterial plaque. Bad heart
genetics or misuse of steroids trump good height genetics.
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