Washington University in Saint Louis

WUSTL in the News >


WUSTL in the News Spotlight


(Excerpted from The Washington Post, Monday, March 3, 2008)

Stress Can Help Trigger Stroke

The notion that stress can help bring on a stroke may have merit, British researchers say.

"If you divide the population into five different groups according to how severe their stress is, someone in the highest stress group, reporting the greatest stress, has a 40 percent increased risk of stroke than someone in the lowest group," said Paul G. Surtees, a psychologist at the University of Cambridge. "That is quite a difference."

On the other hand, his team found no association between depression and stroke risk.

Reporting in the March 4 issue of Neurology, Surtees' group followed more than 20,000 British men and women, aged 41 to 80, for an average of 8.5 years. The participants answered questions on their levels of stress and depression, using standard measures of mental health.

A total of 595 participants experienced a stroke during the study period, 167 of them fatal.

The risk of stroke rose steadily with the amount of stress reported, the researchers said, and the relationship was not changed when other stroke risk factors -- such as smoking, blood pressure, obesity, diabetes and family history -- were factored in.

The risk of stroke wasnotincreased for participants who reported experiencing major depression at any time in their lives or who had had an episode of major depression in the past year.

According to Surtees, the study was not designed to determine how stress might increase stroke risk. "We have thought about this, and we have concluded that the mechanism is linked to the ability to adapt to psychological stress," he said. "People differ considerably in the way they deal with stressful circumstances. The increase is probably due to that, but we need to follow it up."

The relationship might have a simple explanation, said Dr. Mark Goldberg, professor of neurology at Washington University in St. Louis. "People who are under a great deal of stress may not take medications that are prescribed for them," he speculated.

Those medications would be aimed at conditions known to increase the risk of stroke -- high blood pressure, high blood cholesterol, diabetes and the like, Goldberg said. But the newly reported study does not mean that stress should be ranked among those leading risk factors, he said. ...




Appeared in:

Click headline below to view news story as originally posted on an external Web site.

•   Stress Can Help Trigger Stroke

The Washington Post, Monday, March 3, 2008
Byline: Ed Edelson, HealthDay Reporter


Story also ran in 8 others:  CBC News (Canada), HealthDay News, Forbes, U.S. News & World Report, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, drkoop.com, Austin American-Statesman (TX) and DentalPlans.com (FL)
(Note: Links do not imply an endorsement; some sites require registration; links may change or become broken over time.)



Related Information


Related Groups: