Global
warming could mean more heart problems, doctors warn
Wednesday,
September 5, 2007
VIENNA, Austria:
Global warming may be forcing polar bears southward and melting glaciers, but
it could also have an impact on your heart.
Doctors
warn that the warmer weather expected with climate change might also produce
more heart problems.
"If
it really is a few degrees warmer in the next 50 years, we could definitely
have more cardiovascular disease," said Dr. Karin Schenck-Gustafsson, of
the department of cardiology at Sweden's Karolinska Institute.
On
the sidelines of the European Society of Cardiology's annual meeting in Vienna
this week, some experts said that the issue deserved more attention. It's
well-known that people have more heart problems when it's hot. During the European heat wave in 2003, there
were an estimated 35,000 deaths above expected levels in the first two weeks of
August. In France alone, nearly 15,000 extra people died when temperatures
soared. Experts say that much of that was due to heart problems in the elderly
worsened by the extreme heat.
The
hardening of the heart's arteries is like rust developing on a car. "Rust
develops much more quickly at warm temperatures, and so does
atherosclerosis," said Dr. Gordon Tomaselli, chief of cardiology at Johns
Hopkins University and program chair at the American Heart Association.
In
higher temperatures, we sweat to get rid of heat. During that process, blood is
sent to the skin where temperatures are cooler, which opens up the blood
vessels. In turn, the heart rate rises and blood pressure drops. That
combination can be dangerous for older people and those with weakened
cardiovascular systems.
Extreme
events like the recent devastating fires in Greece may complicate the problem.
The increasing number of forest fires that have swept through Southeast Asia in
the last decade have also brought a spike in heart disease, experts say. But because there are so many scientific uncertainties
about climate change, like how fast it will occur, or what other factors such
as pollution levels or natural phenomena might affect it, doctors are unsure
what exactly to prescribe.
Unlike
modeling future disease outbreaks, where we know most of the risk factors that
spread diseases, there are too many unknowns involved in connecting global
warming and heart disease to make predictions about how many more people will
have heart problems in the future.
Other factors may also make climate change more dangerous, like the fact
that the majority of the world's population are expected to live in cities in
the future. With concrete skyscrapers, fewer trees and pollution spewed out by
factories and cars, cities are at least a few degrees hotter than surrounding
rural areas.
Doctors
also suspect that pollution, which is expected to get worse with climate
change, contributes to heart disease. They think that when the lungs are
irritated by tiny airborne contaminants, that could set off another bad
reaction in the heart.
"A
lot of cardiovascular risk could be avoided by targeting the urban heat
effect," said Diarmid Campbell-Lendrum, a climate change expert at the
World Health Organization. Though Campbell-Lendrum said that some European
countries have put heat warning systems into place to alert people when they
might be at particular risk, more needs to be done.
Still,
higher temperatures won't be bad news for everyone. "Skiers aren't going
to like it, but warmer weather could encourage some people to exercise more and
actually improve their health," said Dr. John Cleland, a heart failure
specialist at the University of Hull in the United Kingdom. The human body is not designed to handle
extreme heat for long periods of time; mechanisms like sweating are only
effective as a temporary fix. But that could change if our environment becomes
radically different. Some experts speculate that humans might even develop some
kind of biological way to better tolerate heat.
"The
problem is that this process of evolutionary adaptation for humans takes not
decades, but tens of thousands of years," said Dr. Claudio Ceconi, a
cardiologist at the University of Ferrara and spokesman for the European
Society of Cardiology. "We unfortunately won't be able to evolve quickly
enough to keep up."
In
the meantime, Cleland said that we should focus on things we can control, like
diet and fitness. "We should think more about going outside for a bicycle
ride even when it's not bright and sunny," he said.
Investing
in ways to reduce our carbon footprint will also help. "Mankind needs to
get creative," Cleland said, suggesting that massive reforestation
projects would probably help.
"If
we don't do something now and global warming accelerates, then cardiovascular
disease might be the least of our worries."