As Noise Rises, So May Heart Risks

Loud, grating noise is not just annoying, it can increase the risk of a heart attack, researchers report.

This increase in risk appears to be caused by the physiological effects of environmental and work noise, the German research team found.

"Our results demonstrate that chronic noise exposure is associated with a mildly to moderately increased risk of heart attack," researcher Dr. Stefan Willich, director of the Institute for Social Medicine, Epidemiology and Health Economics at Charite University Medical Centre in Berlin, said in a prepared statement.

"The increase appears more closely associated with actual sound levels rather than with subjective annoyance. However, there were differences between men and women and these need further investigation," he noted.

Reporting in the Nov. 24 online edition of the European Heart Journal, Willich's team compared data on 2,000 heart attack patients with data on more than 2,000 patients admitted to trauma and general surgery departments for reasons other than heart attack.

They found that exposure to environmental noise, such as that of traffic, tripled the risk of heart attack for women and boosted it by nearly 50 percent for men. On the other hand, the researchers found that workplace noise increased heart risks for men by nearly a third but did not seem to affect women.

The researchers noted that risk did not continue to increase with rising noise levels. "We seem to be looking at a threshold at which risk occurs and remains constant above this, and this [threshold] appears to be around 60 decibels," Willich said. Sixty decibels is the level of noise typically found in a large office, the report indicated.

The link between heart attack and noise might be due to noise increasing psychological stress and anger, which could lead to increased levels of adrenaline and noradrenaline, which are associated with increased blood pressure and cholesterol, Willich noted.

"Such mechanisms may be further modified by personal parameters –– smoking or pressure from meeting deadlines," Willich said. "In that case, chronic noise would be the equivalent of an outside risk factor contributing to atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease."

One expert thinks the connection between heart attack and noise may be valid.

"One of the strengths of the paper is the attempt to include traditional, established risk factors for coronary heart disease in the explanatory model, including hypertension, smoking, obesity, as well as socioeconomic status," said Dr. Peter Rabinowitz, an associate professor of internal and occupational medicine at Yale University School of Medicine.

The fact that a noise effect remains after adjusting for these multiple factors is notable, Rabinowitz added. "The paper provides further support for the possibility that noise, a hazard so common we tend to take it for granted, is contributing to the burden of cardiovascular disease."

It is possible that noise is a marker for other stressful environmental conditions related to modern living, Rabinowitz said. "Since there are steps that society can take to reduce both environmental and workplace noise, however, it seems advisable to continue to explore the possibility that such interventions could have a significant health benefit."

Another expert believes that while the connection between noise and increased risk of heart attack is not proven, it is worth further study.

"This article addresses an important question," said Dr. Harlan M. Krumholz, a professor of cardiology at Yale University Medical School. "But you are left with more questions than answers," he added.

Krumholz wondered if other factors could explain the finding. These include diet, stress and obesity. "The finding may just mark people who have fewer resources," he said.

"What's left open is whether the noise is causing the increased risk or whether people in those environments are subject to some other kind of risk factors," Krumholz said.