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  Vol. 298 No. 3, July 18, 2007 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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  Grand Rounds at the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center
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CLINICIAN'S CORNER
Acute Emotional Stress and Cardiac Arrhythmias

Roy C. Ziegelstein, MD

JAMA. 2007;298:324-329.

Episodes of acute emotional stress can have significant adverse effects on the heart. Acute emotional stress can produce left ventricular contractile dysfunction, myocardial ischemia, or disturbances of cardiac rhythm. Although these abnormalities are often only transient, their consequences can be gravely damaging and sometimes fatal. Despite the many descriptions of catastrophic cardiovascular events in the setting of acute emotional stress, the anatomical substrate and physiological pathways by which emotional stress triggers cardiovascular events are only now being characterized, aided by the advent of functional neuroimaging. Recent evidence indicates that asymmetric brain activity is particularly important in making the heart more susceptible to ventricular arrhythmias. Lateralization of cerebral activity during emotional stress may stimulate the heart asymmetrically and produce areas of inhomogeneous repolarization that create electrical instability and facilitate the development of cardiac arrhythmias. Patients with ischemic heart disease who survive an episode of sudden cardiac death in the setting of acute emotional stress should receive a beta-blocker. Nonpharmacological approaches to manage emotional stress in patients with and without coronary artery disease, including social support, relaxation therapy, yoga, meditation, controlled slow breathing, and biofeedback, are also appropriate to consider and merit additional investigation in randomized trials.


Author Affiliation: Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and Division of Cardiology, Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, Baltimore, Maryland.


RELATED ARTICLE

Acute Emotional Stress and the Heart
Janet M. Torpy, Alison E. Burke, and Richard M. Glass
JAMA. 2007;298(3):360.
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