MEDICAL NEWS:
MEDITATION MAY IMPROVE CARDIAC RISK FACTORS IN PATIENTS WITH CORONARY HEART
DISEASE
June 15, 2006 — A relaxation technique known as transcendental meditation may
decrease blood pressure and reduce insulin resistance among patients with
coronary heart disease, according to a report in the June 12 issue of
Archives of Internal Medicine, a journal of the American Medical
Association.
Transcendental meditation, derived from the ancient Vedic tradition in India,
is taught through a standard protocol involving lectures, personal instruction
and group meetings, according to background information in the article. It has
previously been shown to lower blood pressure but its effect on other risk
factors associated with coronary heart disease, including those linked to the
metabolic syndrome, has not been thoroughly examined. The metabolic syndrome
refers to a cluster of symptoms that increase cardiac risk, including high blood
pressure (hypertension), abdominal obesity, high cholesterol and insulin
resistance, which occurs when the body is unable to use the insulin produced by
the pancreas to process sugar into energy.
Maura Paul-Labrador, M.P.H., Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, and
colleagues conducted a 16-week trial of transcendental meditation in patients
with coronary heart disease. Fifty-two participants (average age 67.7 years)
were instructed in transcendental meditation and 51 control patients (average
age 67.1 years) received health education. At the beginning and end of the
trial, the patients fasted overnight and then gave a blood sample, participated
in a medical history review and underwent tests of blood vessel function and
heart rate variability. Heart rate variability testing assesses the functioning
of the autonomic nervous system, which controls the heart and other involuntary
muscles.
Overall, of the 103 participants who were enrolled, 84 (82 percent) completed
the study. At the end of the trial, patients in the transcendental meditation
group had significantly lower blood pressure; improved fasting blood glucose and
insulin levels, which signify reduced insulin resistance; and more stable
functioning of the autonomic nervous system. "These physiological effects were
accomplished without changes in body weight, medication or psychosocial
variables and despite a marginally statistically significant increase in
physical activity in the health education group," the authors write.
"These current results also expand our causal understanding of the role of
stress in the rising epidemic of the metabolic syndrome," they continue.
"Although current low levels of physical activity, unhealthy eating habits and
resultant obesity are triggers for this epidemic, the demands of modern society
may also be responsible for higher levels of chronic stress." Such stress causes
the release of cortisol and other hormones and neurotransmitters, which over
time damage the cardiovascular system.
"Our results, demonstrating beneficial physiological effects of
transcendental meditation in the absence of effects on psychosocial variables,
suggest that transcendental meditation may modulate response to stress rather
than alter the stress itself, similar to the physiological impact of exercise
conditioning," the authors write. This method of controlling the body's response
to stress may provide a new target for the treatment and prevention of coronary
heart disease, warranting further study, they conclude.
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