Post by Joanna on Aug 16, 2014 0:02:54 GMT -5
Can you die from a broken heart?
I went to a funeral recently for a couple who died within a week of each other. Then I read a story in the news last week about a man in California who died hours after his wife. It made me wonder how often this happens – and what could be the reason.
When Margaret Williams died in Wales last month, her husband Edmund selected the poems for her funeral. They had been married for 60 years and their love had endured. In their late 80s, they would still go into their garden holding hands. Then, a week after Margaret's death, Edmund himself died. In his grief, he stopped living. Her funeral became their funeral – two coffins beside each other, the couple united in death as they had been in life. The poem he had written for her, and chosen for the service, was read for them both.
The same month, also in Wales, 101-year-old Clifford Hartland died while waiting for his wife Marjorie to return home from hospital after being discharged with a broken leg. Their daughter Christine said her mother phoned her that evening in distress and Christine told her to think about their happy years of marriage while she drifted off to sleep. Marjorie died at 1 o’clock that night, on the couple's 76th wedding anniversary.
About the same time, Don and Maxine Simpson died in Bakersfield in California. He was 90 and she was 87 and they were as inseparable as they had always been after meeting at a bowling alley in 1952 and marrying that same year. Maxine died first and four hours later, by her side, Don followed.
A similar sad scene occurred in April with Kenneth and Helen Felumlee of Nashport, Ohio. They were both in their 90s and had been married 70 years. Helen died and Kenneth followed 15 hours later. As their daughter told the local paper: "We knew when one went, the other was going to go. We wanted them to go together and they did." The family said the couple had shared a bed for 70 years – when they were once allocated bunks on a ferry, they had snuggled up on the single bed below.
There appears to be a pattern, and perhaps it is.
Research published earlier this year in JAMA Internal Medicine found that, while it happened rarely, the number of people who had a heart attack or a stroke in the month after a loved one died was double that of a matched control group in which people were not grieving . One of the authors, Dr, Sunil Shah of St George's at the University of London, said: "We often use the term a 'broken heart' to signify the pain of losing a loved one and our study shows that bereavement can have a direct effect on the health of the heart."
Some people talk about "broken heart syndrome," known more formally as stress cardiomyopathy or takotsubo cardiomyopathy. According to the British Heart Foundation, it is a "temporary condition where your heart muscle becomes suddenly weakened or stunned. The left ventricle, one of the heart's chambers, changes shape."
It can be brought on by shock. "About three quarters of people diagnosed with takotsubo cardiomyopathy have experienced significant emotional or physical stress prior to becoming unwell," the charity says. This stress might be bereavement, but it could be a shock of another kind. There are documented cases of people suffering the condition after being frightened by colleagues pulling a prank, or suffering the stress of speaking to a large group of people. It's speculated the sudden release of hormones – in particular, adrenaline – causes the stunning of the heart muscle.
This is different from a heart attack, which is a stopping of the heart because the blood supply is constricted, perhaps by clogged arteries. "Most heart attacks occur due to blockages and blood clots forming in the coronary arteries, the arteries that supply the heart with blood," says an FAQ on broken heart syndrome published by Johns Hopkins University. By contrast, most patients who suffer from cardiomyopathy "have fairly normal coronary arteries and do not have severe blockages or clots", the website says. Many people simply recover – the stress goes away and the heart returns to its normal shape. But in some, like the old or those with a heart condition, the change in the shape of the heart can prompt a fatal heart attack.
The scientific name, takotsubo cardiomyopathy comes from the Japanese word for a type of round-bottomed, narrow-necked vessel used for catching octopuses. The sudden stress causes the left ventricle of the heart – the one that does the pumping – to balloon out into the shape of the pot.
There is also evidence of an increased risk of death after the hospitalization of a partner, according to a study published in 2006 in the New England Journal of Medicine. Other research published in 2011, meanwhile, suggests the odds of the surviving partner dying are increased for six months after their partner's death. The researchers pointed out that a mutually supportive marriage acts as a buffer against stress. Partners also monitor each other and encourage healthy behavior – reminding each other to take their daily tablets, for example, and checking they don't drink too much.
Whatever the science behind "broken heart syndrome," the results are bitter-sweet. There is, of course, the grief of bereaved family members who have lost two people they love. But there is also often a relief that a couple deeply in love should have exited life together. Edmund Williams' poem for his wife Margaret talked about "two lovers entwined" and a journey "to the end of time's end.”
If there is a benevolent heart condition, surely takotsubo cardiomyopathy is the one – but "dying of a broken heart" puts it better.
Fate of the broken-hearted: "Broken heart" is referred to in the 1611 King James Version of the Bible: "The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart; and saveth such as be of a contrite spirit." (Psalms 34:18)
Shakespeare features several characters who die for love – King Lear perishes shortly after discovering the murder of his daughter Cordelia, and in Romeo and Juliet, Lady Montague is reported by her husband to have died of a broken heart: "Grief of my son's exile hath stopp'd her breath."
Alfred Lord Tennyson's 1842 poem, "The Lady of Shalott," relates how the tragic damsel of Arthurian legend lay down in a boat to die and be discovered by Lancelot, the knight she loved:
For ere she reach'd upon the tide
The first house by the water-side,
Singing in her song she died,
The Lady of Shalott.
Source: Stephen Evans, BBC News, August 13, 2014.