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How your emotions change the shape of your heart

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    No other organ,
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    perhaps no other object in human life,
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    is as imbued with metaphor
    and meaning as the human heart.
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    Over the course of history,
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    the heart has been a symbol
    of our emotional lives.
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    It was considered by many
    to be the seat of the soul,
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    the repository of the emotions.
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    The very word "emotion" stems in part
    from the French verb "émouvoir,"
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    meaning "to stir up."
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    And perhaps it's only logical
    that emotions would be linked to an organ
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    characterized by its agitated movement.
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    But what is this link?
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    Is it real or purely metaphorical?
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    As a heart specialist,
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    I am here today to tell you
    that this link is very real.
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    Emotions, you will learn,
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    can and do have a direct
    physical effect on the human heart.
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    But before we get into this,
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    let's talk a bit about
    the metaphorical heart.
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    The symbolism of the emotional heart
    endures even today.
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    If we ask people which image
    they most associate with love,
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    there's no question that the Valentine
    heart would the top the list.
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    The heart shape, called a cardioid,
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    is common in nature.
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    It's found in the leaves,
    flowers and seeds of many plants,
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    including silphium,
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    which was used for birth control
    in the Middle Ages
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    and perhaps is the reason why
    the heart became associated
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    with sex and romantic love.
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    Whatever the reason,
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    hearts began to appear in paintings
    of lovers in the 13th century.
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    Over time, the pictures
    came to be colored red,
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    the color of blood,
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    a symbol of passion.
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    In the Roman Catholic Church,
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    the heart shape became known
    as the Sacred Heart of Jesus.
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    Adorned with thorns
    and emitting ethereal light,
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    it became an insignia of monastic love.
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    This association between the heart
    and love has withstood modernity.
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    When Barney Clark, a retired dentist
    with end-stage heart failure,
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    received the first permanent
    artificial heart in Utah in 1982,
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    his wife of 39 years
    reportedly asked the doctors,
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    "Will he still be able to love me?"
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    Today, we know that the heart
    is not the source of love
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    or the other emotions, per se;
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    the ancients were mistaken.
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    And yet, more and more,
    we have come to understand
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    that the connection between the heart
    and the emotions is a highly intimate one.
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    The heart may not originate our feelings,
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    but it is highly responsive to them.
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    In a sense, a record of our emotional life
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    is written on our hearts.
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    Fear and grief, for example,
    can cause profound cardiac injury.
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    The nerves that control unconscious
    processes such as the heartbeat
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    can sense distress
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    and trigger a maladaptive
    fight-or-flight response
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    that triggers blood vessels to constrict,
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    the heart to gallop
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    and blood pressure to rise,
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    resulting in damage.
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    In other words,
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    it is increasingly clear
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    that our hearts are extraordinarily
    sensitive to our emotional system,
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    to the metaphorical heart, if you will.
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    There is a heart disorder
    first recognized about two decades ago
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    called "takotsubo cardiomyopathy,"
    or "the broken heart syndrome,"
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    in which the heart acutely weakens
    in response to intense stress or grief,
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    such as after a romantic breakup
    or the death of a loved one.
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    As these pictures show,
    the grieving heart in the middle
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    looks very different
    than the normal heart on the left.
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    It appears stunned
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    and frequently balloons into
    the distinctive shape of a takotsubo,
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    shown on the right,
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    a Japanese pot with a wide base
    and a narrow neck.
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    We don't know exactly why this happens,
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    and the syndrome usually resolves
    within a few weeks.
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    However, in the acute period,
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    it can cause heart failure,
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    life-threatening arrhythmias,
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    even death.
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    For example, the husband
    of an elderly patient of mine
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    had died recently.
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    She was sad, of course, but accepting.
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    Maybe even a bit relieved.
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    It had been a very long illness;
    he'd had dementia.
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    But a week after the funeral,
    she looked at his picture
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    and became tearful.
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    And then she developed chest pain,
    and with it, came shortness of breath,
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    distended neck veins, a sweaty brow,
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    a noticeable panting
    as she was sitting up in a chair --
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    all signs of heart failure.
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    She was admitted to the hospital,
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    where an ultrasound confirmed
    what we already suspected:
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    her heart had weakened
    to less than half its normal capacity
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    and had ballooned into
    the distinctive shape of a takotsubo.
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    But no other tests were amiss,
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    no sign of clogged arteries anywhere.
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    Two weeks later, her emotional state
    had returned to normal
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    and so, an ultrasound confirmed,
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    had her heart.
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    Takotsubo cardiomyopathy has been linked
    to many stressful situations,
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    including public speaking --
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    domestic disputes, gambling losses,
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    even a surprise birthday party.
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    (Laughter)
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    It's even been associated
    with widespread social upheaval,
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    such as after a natural disaster.
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    For example, in 2004,
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    a massive earthquake devastated a district
    on the largest island in Japan.
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    More than 60 people were killed,
    and thousands were injured.
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    On the heels of this catastrophe,
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    researchers found that the incidents
    of takotsubo cardiomyopathy
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    increased twenty-four-fold in the district
    one month after the earthquake,
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    compared to a similar
    period the year before.
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    The residences of these cases
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    closely correlated with
    the intensity of the tremor.
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    In almost every case,
    patients lived near the epicenter.
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    Interestingly, takotsubo cardiomyopathy
    has been seen after a happy event, too,
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    but the heart appears
    to react differently,
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    ballooning in the midportion,
    for example, and not at the apex.
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    Why different emotional precipitants
    would result in different cardiac changes
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    remains a mystery.
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    But today, perhaps as an ode
    to our ancient philosophers,
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    we can say that even if emotions
    are not contained inside our hearts,
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    the emotional heart overlaps
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    its biological counterpart,
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    in surprising and mysterious ways.
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    Heart syndromes, including sudden death,
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    have long been reported in individuals
    experiencing intense emotional disturbance
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    or turmoil in their metaphorical hearts.
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    In 1942,
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    the Harvard physiologist Walter Cannon
    published a paper called "'Voodoo' Death,"
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    in which he described
    cases of death from fright
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    in people who believed
    they had been cursed,
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    such as by a witch doctor
    or as a consequence of eating taboo fruit.
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    In many cases, the victim, all hope lost,
    dropped dead on the spot.
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    What these cases had in common
    was the victim's absolute belief
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    that there was an external force
    that could cause their demise,
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    and against which
    they were powerless to fight.
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    This perceived lack of control,
    Cannon postulated,
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    resulted in an unmitigated
    physiological response,
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    in which blood vessels
    constricted to such a degree
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    that blood volume acutely dropped,
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    blood pressure plummeted,
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    the heart acutely weakened,
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    and massive organ damage resulted
    from a lack of transported oxygen.
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    Cannon believed that voodoo deaths
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    were limited to indigenous
    or "primitive" people.
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    But over the years, these types of deaths
    have been shown to occur
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    in all manner of modern people, too.
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    Today, death by grief has been seen
    in spouses and in siblings.
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    Broken hearts are literally
    and figuratively deadly.
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    These associations hold true
    even for animals.
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    In a fascinating study in 1980
    published in the journal "Science,"
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    researchers fed caged rabbits
    a high-cholesterol diet
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    to study its effect
    on cardiovascular disease.
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    Surprisingly, they found that some rabbits
    developed a lot more disease than others,
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    but they couldn't explain why.
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    The rabbits had very similar diet,
    environment and genetic makeup.
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    They thought it might have
    something to do with
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    how frequently the technician
    interacted with the rabbits.
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    So they repeated the study,
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    dividing the rabbits into two groups.
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    Both groups were fed
    a high-cholesterol diet.
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    But in one group, the rabbits
    were removed from their cages,
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    held, petted, talked to, played with,
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    and in the other group,
    the rabbits remained in their cages
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    and were left alone.
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    At one year, on autopsy,
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    the researchers found
    that the rabbits in the first group,
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    that received human interaction,
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    had 60 percent less aortic disease
    than rabbits in the other group,
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    despite having similar cholesterol levels,
    blood pressure and heart rate.
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    Today, the care of the heart has become
    less the province of philosophers,
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    who dwell upon the heart's
    metaphorical meanings,
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    and more the domain of doctors like me,
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    wielding technologies
    that even a century ago,
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    because of the heart's exalted
    status in human culture,
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    were considered taboo.
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    In the process, the heart
    has been transformed
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    from an almost supernatural object
    imbued with metaphor and meaning
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    into a machine that can be
    manipulated and controlled.
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    But this is the key point:
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    these manipulations, we now understand,
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    must be complemented
    by attention to the emotional life
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    that the heart, for thousands of years,
    was believed to contain.
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    Consider, for example,
    the Lifestyle Heart Trial,
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    published in the British journal
    "The Lancet" in 1990.
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    Forty-eight patients with moderate
    or severe coronary disease
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    were randomly assigned to usual care
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    or an intensive lifestyle
    that included a low-fat vegetarian diet,
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    moderate aerobic exercise,
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    group psychosocial support
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    and stress management advice.
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    The researchers found
    that the lifestyle patients
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    had a nearly five percent reduction
    in coronary plaque.
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    Control patients, on the other hand,
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    had five percent more
    coronary plaque at one year
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    and 28 percent more at five years.
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    They also had nearly double
    the rate of cardiac events,
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    like heart attacks,
    coronary bypass surgery
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    and cardiac-related deaths.
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    Now, here's an interesting fact:
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    some patients in the control group
    adopted diet and exercise plans
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    that were nearly as intense
    as those in the intensive lifestyle group.
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    Their heart disease still progressed.
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    Diet and exercise alone were not enough
    to facilitate coronary disease regression.
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    At both one- and five-year follow-ups,
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    stress management
    was more strongly correlated
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    with reversal of coronary disease
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    than exercise was.
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    No doubt, this and similar
    studies are small,
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    and, of course, correlation
    does not prove causation.
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    It's certainly possible that stress
    leads to unhealthy habits,
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    and that's the real reason
    for the increased cardiovascular risk.
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    But as with the association
    of smoking and lung cancer,
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    when so many studies show the same thing,
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    and when there are mechanisms
    to explain a causal relationship,
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    it seems capricious to deny
    that one probably exists.
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    What many doctors have concluded
    is what I, too, have learned
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    in my nearly two decades
    as a heart specialist:
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    the emotional heart intersects
    with its biological counterpart
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    in surprising and mysterious ways.
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    And yet, medicine today continues
    to conceptualize the heart as a machine.
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    This conceptualization
    has had great benefits.
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    Cardiology, my field,
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    is undoubtedly one of the greatest
    scientific success stories
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    of the past 100 years.
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    Stents, pacemakers, defibrillators,
    coronary bypass surgery,
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    heart transplants --
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    all these things were developed
    or invented after World War II.
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    However, it's possible
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    that we are approaching the limits
    of what scientific medicine can do
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    to combat heart disease.
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    Indeed, the rate of decline
    of cardiovascular mortality
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    has slowed significantly
    in the past decade.
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    We will need to shift to a new paradigm
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    to continue to make the kind of progress
    to which we have become accustomed.
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    In this paradigm, psychosocial factors
    will need to be front and center
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    in how we think about heart problems.
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    This is going to be an uphill battle,
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    and it remains a domain
    that is largely unexplored.
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    The American Heart Association
    still does not list emotional stress
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    as a key modifiable risk factor
    for heart disease,
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    perhaps in part because blood cholesterol
    is so much easier to lower
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    than emotional and social disruption.
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    There is a better way, perhaps,
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    if we recognize that when
    we say "a broken heart,"
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    we are indeed sometimes talking
    about a real broken heart.
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    We must, must pay more attention to
    the power and importance of the emotions
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    in taking care of our hearts.
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    Emotional stress, I have learned,
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    is often a matter of life and death.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How your emotions change the shape of your heart
Speaker:
Sandeep Jauhar
Description:

"A record of our emotional life is written on our hearts," says cardiologist and author Sandeep Jauhar. In a stunning talk, he explores the mysterious ways our emotions impact the health of our hearts -- causing them to change shape in response to grief or fear, to literally break in response to emotional heartbreak -- and calls for a shift in how we care for our most vital organ.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
16:02

English subtitles

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