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Drs. Gideon Koren and Stan Van Uum from the University of Western Ontario developed a method to measure cortisol levels in hair, which they say provides an accurate assessment of stress levels in the months prior to a heart attack. Red hair

Effect of chronic stress may be found in hair: study

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A new study reveals that a person's hair may predict their risk of heart attack. Canadian and Israeli researchers say hair contains signs of physical and psychological stress, and may help doctors predict who is at risk of stress-related health woes.
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An endocrinologist with the University of Western Ontario says measuring cortisol levels in hair was the strongest predictor of heart attacks when compared to the measurement of other risk factors.

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Drs. Gideon Koren and Stan Van Uum from the University of Western Ontario developed a method to measure cortisol levels in hair, which they say provides an accurate assessment of stress levels in the months prior to a heart attack. Red hair

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Drs. Gideon Koren and Stan Van Uum from the University of Western Ontario developed a method to measure cortisol levels in hair, which they say provides an accurate assessment of stress levels in the months prior to a heart attack.

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Date: Fri. Sep. 3 2010 10:49 AM ET

If our eyes are the window to our soul, might our hair be a window into our heart attack risk?

Canadian researchers think it might be, suggesting that clues found in our hair could signal if we could be headed to the cardiologist.

According to a new study, measuring levels of the stress hormone cortisol in our hair may be a good way to screen for chronic stress and our risk for a heart attack.

While it's long been theorized that chronic stress can put one at risk of heart disease and heart attacks, there's never been a good way to objectively measure chronic stress. Instead, most studies on chronic stress and heart attacks have used questionnaires to ask patients about their stress levels.

So Drs. Gideon Koren and Stan Van Uum from the University of Western Ontario developed a method to measure cortisol levels in hair, which they say provides an accurate assessment of stress levels in the months prior to a heart attack.

"Intuitively we know stress is not good for you, but it's not easy to measure," Koren, who holds the Ivey Chair in Molecular Toxicology at Western's Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry said in a news release.

His team notes that while blood, urine and saliva can also contain indicators of stress, cortisol captured in the hair shaft remains stable for months -- even years. In fact, researchers have been able to detect cortisol in the hair of ancient Peruvian mummies dating back to AD 550-1000.

"We know that on average, hair grows one centimetre (cm) a month, and so if we take a hair sample six cm long, we can determine stress levels for six months by measuring the cortisol level in the hair," Koren said.

In the study, hair samples three centimetres long were collected from 56 men who were admitted to the Meir Medical Centre in Kfar-Saba, Israel, suffering heart attacks. A control group of 56 men, who were hospitalized for reasons other than a heart attack, was also asked for hair samples.

When the researchers measured the cortisol levels in the hair of the two groups, they found higher cortisol levels corresponding to the previous three months in the heart attack patients, compared to the control group.

The researchers did note that the patients who'd had heart attacks also had more cholesterol problems. But their blood pressure problems were about the same, as was their family history of coronary artery disease.

After accounting for the known risk factors, hair cortisol content emerged as the strongest predictor of heart attack, the researchers said.

The study, published in the journal Stress, was funded by Physician Services Inc. and CIHR, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

Comments are now closed for this story

Flora
said

As a hairstylist, I can tell you that this has been known for years,we were taught this in school.Whatever goes into your body shows up in the hair and nails.The hair shafts on your head are actually dead (that is why it doesn't hurt to cut the ends. )So in reference to the levels of cortisol in the hair shaft or any other chemical, it would remain in there unless it is changed chemically .Some external deposits can be removed mechanically with a special product,/shampoo/treatment.For example an iron deposit from iron laden water used to wash the hair can be removed to prepare the hair for a hair service where the iron may interfere with a chemical processing. a "chemical" that has been ingested flows through the blood stream and the blood is what feeds the the "root" of the hair thus impacting the hair structure as it is formed beneath the surface of the scalp. This is also true for finger nails.


Kelly
said

And if one is bald ??????


Jim
said

This might be the most useful research out there, or the most damning. If we can discover who is suffering from unbearable stress and treat it before things go from bad to worse, we would collectively save trillions in physicial and mental health care. On the other hand, we may find that unbearable stress is a truly common link in modern society, demanding that we either reinvent our society from the basement up, or we just plow the whole thing under and try again.


MP
said

So bald people have what recourse? Eyebrow plucking?


CYL
said

that why my hair is falling out..... stress.When i'm not under stress, it seems to stay in my head.


Cathi
said

As a stress consultant, I find your study to be quite fascinating. Did your research demonstrate what happens to the level of cortisol in the hair shafts once chronic stress was reduced?Thank you.

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