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Elevated Levels of Cortisol in Hair Precede Acute Myocardial Infarction

33 Pages Posted: 17 Jul 2020

See all articles by Tomas Faresjö

Tomas Faresjö

Linkoping University - Department of Health, Medicine and Caring Sciences

Susanna Strömberg

Linkoping University - General Practice

Mikael Jones

Macquarie University - Department of Psychology

Andreas Stomby

Linkoping University - General Practice

Jan-Erik Karlsson

Linkoping University - Cardiology

Carl Johan Östgren

Linkoping University - General Practice

Åshild Faresjö

Linkoping University - Public Health

Elvar Theodorsson

Linkoping University - Clinical Chemistry

More...

Abstract

Background: Prolonged stress is a factor that negatively affects public health and disease risks in our society today. A general perception is that stress is a risk factor for cardiovascular diseases, but the scientific evidence for this is scarce. This study aims to investigate whether middle-aged men and women who had suffered an acute myocardial infarction (AMI) had elevated cortisol concentration measured in their hair (HCC), during the month before the acute event, compared to a large control group from the general population.

Methods: A case-control study on a regional population-based cohort from southeastern Sweden. Cases of acute myocardial infarction N=174 (average age 58 years, SD = 6) were recruited from cardiology clinics and the controls N = 3156 (average 57 years, SD = 4) from the general population from the Swedish CArdioPulmonary bioImage Study (SCAPIS).

Findings: The median HCC for men who had suffered an AMI was 57.8 pg/mg (IQR 29.0-167.6), compared to 25.9 (17.0-52.0) pg/mg for the control group (p < 0.0001). The median HCC for women who had suffered an AMI was 46.6 (IQR 20.5-100.8) pg/mg, and 20.1 (IQR 13.6-38.2) pg/mg in the control group (p < 0.0001). The discrimination of cases with AMI from controls remained statistically significant after controlling for other potential cardiovascular risk factors in both men and women.

Interpretation: Middle-aged men and women with acute myocardial infarction had significantly elevated cortisol levels during the month before the cardiac event. The biomarker hair cortisol concentration was independently and significantly related to AMI, even after traditional cardiovascular risk factors was taken into account. Chronic stress may be a new and a clinically significant risk factor for AMI.

Funding Statement: This work was supported by a research grant from the Swedish AFA Insurance, Stockholm by [Grant number Dnr: 160340].

Declaration of Interests: The authors declare no competing interests.

Ethics Approval Statement: Data collection of the AMI cases was approved by the Regional Ethical Review Board in Linköping (# 2016-79-31, #2016-453-32, #2017-106-32). The SCAPIS study was approved by the Umeå Ethical Review Board (# 2010-228-31 M). All participants gave their written informed consent to participate and the study complies with the Declaration of Helsinki.

Keywords: Acute myocardial infarction; biomarker; cardiovascular risk factors; hair cortisol; stress

Suggested Citation

Faresjö, Tomas and Strömberg, Susanna and Jones, Mikael and Stomby, Andreas and Karlsson, Jan-Erik and Östgren, Carl Johan and Faresjö, Åshild and Theodorsson, Elvar, Elevated Levels of Cortisol in Hair Precede Acute Myocardial Infarction (4/16/2020). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3578765 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3578765

Tomas Faresjö (Contact Author)

Linkoping University - Department of Health, Medicine and Caring Sciences ( email )

Susanna Strömberg

Linkoping University - General Practice

Linköping
Sweden

Mikael Jones

Macquarie University - Department of Psychology

United States

Andreas Stomby

Linkoping University - General Practice

Linköping
Sweden

Jan-Erik Karlsson

Linkoping University - Cardiology

Linköping
Sweden

Carl Johan Östgren

Linkoping University - General Practice

Linköping
Sweden

Åshild Faresjö

Linkoping University - Public Health

Linköping
Sweden

Elvar Theodorsson

Linkoping University - Clinical Chemistry

Linköping
Sweden

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