Heart Disease :: Isolated men having high blood marker linked to cardiovascular

Men who are socially isolated have elevated levels of a blood marker for inflammation that?s linked to cardiovascular disease, according to data from the Framingham Heart Study presented at the American Heart Association?s 45th Annual Conference on Cardiovascular Disease Epidemiology and Prevention.

“Our analyses suggest that it may be good for the heart to be connected,” said Eric B. Loucks, Ph.D., an instructor in the department of society, human development and health at Harvard School of Public Health in Boston. “In general, it seems to be good for health to have close friends and family, to be connected to community groups or religious organizations, and to have a close partner.”

Loucks? team studied 3,267 Framingham Heart Study participants, with an average age of 62 years, who underwent physical exams between 1998 and 2001. The researchers measured blood concentrations of four inflammatory markers including interleukin-6 (IL-6).

The researchers asked the participants five questions about their social network:

marital status;
number of relatives in whom they can confide private matters;
number of close friends in whom they can confide private matters;
involvement in religious meetings or services; and
participation in groups such as senior centers.

They then assigned a social network index of 1 to 4, based on participants? responses, with the lowest number corresponding to social isolation and the highest to high social connection.

After considering major known risk factors for heart disease, men with the lowest level of social involvement had the highest levels of IL-6, the study showed. Specifically, the average concentration of IL-6 in the blood of men with a social network index of 1 was 3.85 picograms per milliliter, compared with 3.52 picograms per milliliter in men with a social network index of 4.


Leave a Comment