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Senior Citizen Health & Medicine

Anger and Hostility Speed Decline in Lung Power for Older Men

Anger and stress in senior men is in the spotlight this week

By Tucker Sutherland, editor

August 31, 2006 – It has been a mixed bag of news in the last week for older men prone to anger and stress. The last is that anger and hostility cause senior men to lose lung power faster than is expected in normal aging. Another big report this week said stress also hastens the development of Alzheimer's disease. On the other hand, new research says our assumptions were wrong about Type A men – those subject to chronic stress from too much drive. The Type Aers are not more likely than other older men, the study says, to develop heart problems.

 

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Read more on Health & Medicine

 

(See links to other reports on stress in sidebar.)

Previous studies have found that negative emotions do cause problems with pulmonary function in people with respiratory disease, such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), according to background on this study.

The authors say, however, they found no published research that has examined the prospective association of "hostility" with decline in pulmonary function.

One recent study reported that hostility was consistently associated with reduced pulmonary function using a cross-sectional design in a sample of young adults. However, we know of no published research that has examined the prospective association of hostility with decline in pulmonary function.

Their hypothesis was that hostility contributes to faster rates of decline in lung function among older adults.

The average age of the men in the lung study was 62, although the ages of the 670 men ranged from 45 to 86. All were taking part in the long-term US Normative Aging Study. The study results were published today in Thorax.

After an initial assessment in 1986, the men were monitored for an average of eight years, during which their lung function was measured on three separate occasions. Their levels of hostility were measured in 1986, using a validated scoring system. The average hostility score was around 18.5, but ranged from 7 to 37.

The men’s lung function at the start of the study varied according to their initial levels of hostility.

It was significantly poorer among those men deemed to exhibit high levels of anger and hostility compared with those who exhibited medium to low levels.

"It is interesting to note that, among more hostile men, pulmonary function was worse at every examination over a 10 year period than in less hostile men," the authors say.

Although the impact was lessened, the association held true even after taking account of factors likely to influence the findings, such as smoking and educational attainment.

Higher levels of hostility were also associated with a faster rate of the natural decline in lung function that occurs with aging.

Each point increase in hostility score was associated with a loss of FEV1— the volume of air that can be forced out of the lungs in one second, and a measure of lung power —of 9 ml a year compared with men whose hostility levels were lower.

The authors point out that hostility and anger have been associated with cardiovascular disease, death, and asthma, and that previous research has suggested that changes in mood can have short term effects on the lungs.

Anger and hostility will alter neurological and hormonal processes, which in turn may disturb immune system activity, producing chronic inflammation, suggest the authors.

They note their findings are limited in that they pertain to older white men and thus cannot be generalized to women, non-white subjects, or younger populations.

Stress Well Known Health Problem

An accompanying editorial comments that the physiological components of anger and stress overlap, and stress is well known to affect the immune system.

“Indeed it is hard to find a disease for which emotion or stress plays absolutely no part in symptom severity, frequency, or intensity of flare-ups,” writes Dr Paul Lehrer of the University of Medicine and Dentistry in New Jersey , USA .

"Stress related factors are known to depress immune function and increase susceptibility to or exacerbate a host of diseases and disorders including asthma, hypertension, upper respiratory infection, various skin diseases, chronic fatigue syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, vasovagal syncope and, more obviously, various psychiatric disorders. Indeed, it is hard to find a disease for which emotion or stress plays absolutely no part in symptom severity, frequency, or intensity of flare-up," Lehrer says.

Chronic anger may permanently alter the normal body responses to and physical and psychological stressors, he suggests, and add to “wear and tear.”

But he cautions that associations do not necessarily equate to cause. “Personality, as well as physiology, can change over time, and deterioration in health and physical function can lead to negative emotion as well as vice versa, including for respiratory diseases.”

Click here to view the paper in full. (pdf)
Click here to view the editorial in full. (pdf)

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