It is becoming as clear as ice that the winter, particularly the holiday season, is bad for your heart health. One study suggests that people are more likely to die of heart-related causes around the holidays than other time of the year. This has bolstered other research showing a spike in heart attacks and in unhealthy behavior during the winter months.
The study, published online in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association, looked at 53 million death records between 1973 and 2001. After excluding homicides, suicides and accidents, the researchers found that the rate of heart disease-related deaths, as well as deaths from other causes, rose sharply between December 25 and January 7. The death rate peaked on Christmas Day and New Year's Day. The researchers theorized that the risk is higher at the holidays because people commonly delay seeking treatment for symptoms during this busy time of year.
Other possible explanations for the holiday increase include emotional stress during the holidays, the tendency to eat and drink more alcohol, but exercise and take medication less.
Dr. Frederick A. Spencer, director of the coronary care unit at the University of Massachusetts Memorial Healthcare Center in Massachusetts, was the lead author of a study and found that there were 53 percent more heart attack cases in winter than the summer.
Says Spencer, "I think there is probably a mixture of factors that increase heart attack risk in winter, such as changes in physiology due to cold weather, increased infection rates, which we know may be a trigger for heart attacks, and seasonal effects on mood."
Heart attacks usually occur in people with atherosclerosis, or a build-up of plaque in their arteries. For a heart attack to occur, some sudden event must cause the plaque to crack and rupture, at which point blood platelets get sticky and form a clot in the artery. In cold weather, Spencer explains, blood platelets appear to be more active and stickier and therefore more likely to clot. Some studies have even shown that levels of cholesterol, which contributes to plaque, rise during the winter.