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Clock Changes Affect Heart Attacks

In the news...(October 31, 2008) - When you get that extra hour of sleep (Read about "Sleep") with the end of daylight saving time in the fall, it does your health and especially your heart some good. But when you lose that hour in the spring - watch out. Adjusting the clocks to summer time on the last Sunday in March increases the risk of heart attack (Read about "Heart Attack") in the following week. In return, putting the clocks back in the autumn reduces the risk, albeit to a lesser extent. That's the basic conclusion of a new study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Scientists examined how the incidence of myocardial infarction has changed with the summer and winter clock-shifts since 1987. Their results show that the number of heart attacks, on average, increases by about five percent during the first week of summertime.

"There's a small increase in risk for the individual, especially during the first three days of the new week," says Dr. Imre Janszky, one of the researchers behind the study. "The disruption in the chronobiological rhythms, the loss of one hour's sleep and the resulting sleep disturbance are the probable causes."

The team also observed that the readjustment back to winter time on the last Sunday in October, which gives us an extra hour's sleep, is followed by a reduction in the risk of heart attack on the Monday. The reduction for the whole week is, however, less than the increase related to the summer adjustment.

According to the scientists, the study provides a conceivable explanation for why myocardial infarction is most common on Mondays, as demonstrated by previous research.

"It's always been thought that it's mainly due to an increase in stress ahead of the new working week," says Dr Janszky. "But perhaps it's also got something to do with the sleep disruption caused by the change in diurnal rhythm at the weekend."

Even though the increase and decrease in risk are relatively small for the individual, the team believes that the study can improve our understanding of how disruptions to diurnal rhythms impact on our health.

"Roughly 1.5 billion people are subjected to these clock-shifts every year, but it's hard to make any generalized statement about how many heart attacks they can cause," adds Dr Rickard Ljung, another member of the research team.

Note: Statements and conclusions of study authors that are published here are solely those of the study authors and do not necessarily reflect this hospital's policy or position. This hospital makes no representation or warranty as to their accuracy or reliability.

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