Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Living near major roads bad for women's heart

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 Oct, 2014 10:46 AM
  • Living near major roads bad for women's heart
Living close to a major road may increase the risk of women dying from sudden cardiac arrest, a research showed.
 
While researchers previously found a modest increase in coronary heart disease risk among people who live near major roadways, the new study may be the first to examine the impact of roadway proximity to the risk of sudden cardiac death.
 
Roadway proximity could be a marker for exposure to air pollution, the findings noted.
 
"It is important for health care providers to recognise that environmental exposures may be under appreciated risk factors for diseases such as sudden cardiac death and fatal coronary heart disease," said study lead author Jaime Hart from the Harvard Medical School Boston, Massachusetts in the US.
 
"On a population level, living near a major roadway was as important a risk factor as smoking, diet or obesity," Hart added.
 
The researchers studied data from 107,130 women (average age 60) who were part of the Nurses' Health Study from 1986-2012.
 
In 523 cases of sudden cardiac death, living within 50 metres of a major road increased the risk of sudden cardiac death by 38 percent, compared to living at least 500 metres away, the findings showed.
 
Each 100 metres closer to roadways was associated with a six percent increased risk for sudden cardiac death.
 
In the 1,159 cases of fatal coronary heart disease, risk increased by 24 percent.
 
"Regardless of where you live, adopting heart healthy habits, such as maintaining a healthy weight, being physically active, eating nutritious food, quitting smoking, and managing stress, can help decrease your risk of heart and blood vessel disease," Hart pointed out.
 
The study appeared in the journal Circulation.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Seeking perfection in everything may trigger suicide: Study

Seeking perfection in everything may trigger suicide: Study
If you look for perfection in everything you do but sometimes fail to achieve that, do not lose heart too often else it may trigger suicide risk...

Seeking perfection in everything may trigger suicide: Study

How the brain learns from touch

How the brain learns from touch
People have learned to gather information from touch and researchers have now found how complex tactile sensations from the skin are coded at the cellular level in the brain...

How the brain learns from touch

Working long hours may trigger diabetes

Working long hours may trigger diabetes
People engaged in manual work or other low socio-economic status jobs for more than 55 hours per week doing have a 30 percent greater risk of developing....

Working long hours may trigger diabetes

5 steps to fitness

5 steps to fitness

Have you been carrying extra pounds longer than you should? Has stubborn body fat got the best of...

5 steps to fitness

Stressed? Walk outdoor to boost spirit

Stressed? Walk outdoor to boost spirit
Coping with stress may come without a cost if you care to go out of your house and walk with others in the local natural environment, a study suggests....

Stressed? Walk outdoor to boost spirit

Gene decides why some people avoid alcohol

Gene decides why some people avoid alcohol
In case of alcohol, variation in bitter taste does get more complex because alcoholic beverages contain flavours and tastes that may mask any aversive effects of bitterness....

Gene decides why some people avoid alcohol