miércoles, 5 de noviembre de 2014

Are Your Heart Symptoms All in Your Head?: MedlinePlus

Are Your Heart Symptoms All in Your Head?: MedlinePlus

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From the National Institutes of HealthNational Institutes of Health




Are Your Heart Symptoms All in Your Head?

For 1 in 5 patients with chest pain, there's no evident physical cause, study says
By Robert Preidt
Monday, November 3, 2014
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MONDAY, Nov. 3, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- Nearly three-quarters of people whose hearts are found to be healthy after being checked for coronary artery disease continue to have persistent symptoms such as chest pain, a new study finds.
Did the doctors miss something? Probably not.
Examinations for heart disease can worsen a patient's anxiety and trigger these symptoms, according to the report published published Nov. 3 in the online journal Open Heart.
The researchers noted that about one out of five people with chest pain has no obvious sign of coronary artery disease and their symptoms are unlikely to have a physical cause.
"But it is not always clear who these patients are, and they often undergo extensive and expensive tests to find out that nothing is wrong with their hearts," the researchers said in a journal news release.
This German study included 253 people who complained of chest pain, shortness of breath and heart palpitations but were found to be free of coronary artery disease after undergoing coronary angiography, an invasive procedure that takes X-ray pictures of the heart.
Before angiography, about one in 10 patients reported severe symptoms and one in four had moderate symptoms. After angiography, seven in 10 patients continued to have symptoms for up to 18 months.
Compared to people in the general population, the study patients had higher overall anxiety levels and higher levels of heart-focused anxiety, and lower quality of life scores.
Also, the patients were 68 percent more likely to have hypochondria and 120 percent more likely to have somatization disorder, which are physical symptoms triggered by state of mind.
In cases where no signs of coronary artery disease are found in people with symptoms, doctors should have patients complete mental health questionnaires, the researchers said. This could help patients avoid further expensive and potentially invasive tests and direct them to the mental health help they require, they noted.
SOURCE: Open Heart, news release, Nov. 3, 2014
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