Relations (1)
related 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts
Hypertension and heart attacks are frequently linked as co-occurring health risks resulting from shared environmental and physiological stressors, such as long-term sleep deprivation [1] and job strain {fact:3, fact:4}. Furthermore, clinical studies often evaluate these conditions together, as evidenced by research adjusting for hypertension when assessing the risk of heart attacks [2].
Facts (4)
Sources
Stress, Lifestyle, and Health – Introduction to Psychology open.maricopa.edu 1 fact
claimJob strain is associated with an increased risk of hypertension, heart attacks, recurrence of heart disease, significant weight loss or gain, and major depressive disorder.
Stress, Lifestyle, and Health – Psychology 2e OpenStax pressbooks.cuny.edu 1 fact
claimJob strain is associated with an increased risk of hypertension according to Schnall & Landsbergis (1994), heart attacks according to Theorell et al. (1998), recurrence of heart disease after a first heart attack according to Aboa-Éboulé et al. (2007), significant weight loss or gain according to Kivimäki et al. (2006), and major depressive disorder according to Stansfeld, Shipley, Head, & Fuhrer (2012).
10 Effects of Long-Term Sleep Deprivation sleephealthsolutionsohio.com 1 fact
claimLong-term sleep deprivation is associated with hypertension, heart attacks, strokes, obesity, diabetes, depression, anxiety, decreased brain function, memory loss, weakened immune system, lower fertility rates, and psychiatric disorders.
Extent and Health Consequences of Chronic Sleep Loss and ... - NCBI ncbi.nlm.nih.gov 1 fact
claimThe increased risk of heart attacks associated with sleep duration in the Nurses Health Study remained significant even after adjusting for a history of hypertension or diabetes (Ayas et al., 2003).