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Health
Problems
Atherosclerosis Research
Stress reduction through
the Transcendental Meditation program may reduce atherosclerosis and risk
of heart attack and stroke
Learning to relax and
reduce stress through the practice of the Transcendental Meditation (tm)
technique may reduce atherosclerosis and risk of heart attack and
stroke-according to findings published in the American Heart Association
journal STROKE.
This is the first
controlled study to suggest that stress reduction by itself can reduce
atherosclerosis without changes in diet and exercise, according to a team
of researchers from UCLA and Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and
Science in Los Angeles and Maharishi University of Management (M.U.M.)
College of Maharishi Vedic Medicine in Fairfield, Iowa. "This finding
that the disease process in the arteries can be reduced through the TM
program may have vast implications for the current management of
cardiovascular disease and health care costs," says Amparo
Castillo-Richmond, M.D., lead author of the study and Assistant Professor
of Medicine at the College of Maharishi Vedic Medicine.
Atherosclerosis is the
hardening of the arteries accompanied by the buildup of fat deposits in
the artery walls. It leads to cardiovascular disease (CVD), the number one
cause of death for all Americans. CVD is particularly lethal to African
Americans, who are twice as likely to die from the illness as whites.
The study was supported by
a grant from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and was
conducted at Drew University in collaboration with the M.U.M. Center for
Natural Medicine and Prevention. Hypertensive African Americans who were
at risk for cardio-vascular disease were randomly assigned to the
Transcendental Meditation program or to a health education control group.
Sixty men and women volunteers completed pretests and posttests over an
average intervention period of about seven months. The level of fatty
substances deposited on participants' arterial walls, or carotid intima-media
thickness (IMT), was evaluated by ultrasound. IMT is a widely used
surrogate measure of coronary atherosclerosis and a predictor of heart
attack and stroke.
Reduced risk of heart
attack and stroke
The study's findings were
impressive. Subjects practicing the TM program showed a decrease of
0.098mm in IMT wall thickness, whereas participants in the health
education control group showed an increase of 0.054mm. Based on two
previous clinical observations, a 0.1mm decrease in IMT would indicate an
approximate 11 percent decrease in risk of heart attack and a 7.7 percent
to 15 percent reduction in risk of stroke.
Results comparable to
medications and lifestyle modification
The reductions found in the
TM group were comparable to those achieved by lipid-lowering medications
and intensive lifestyle modification programs. There was no significant
differences in baseline characteristics, intervention duration or
attrition between the two groups.
Robert Schneider, M.D., second author of the study and director of the NIH-sponsored
Center for Natural Medicine and Prevention (CNMP) at the College of
Maharishi Vedic Medicine, states, "Cardiovascular disease is
associated with psychological stress. Previous research has found that the
TM program decreases coronary heart disease risk factors, including
hypertension, oxidized lipids, stress hormones and psychological stress,
and is associated with reduced cardiovascular disease and death in African
Americans and the general population."
Self-repair mechanism
activated
"Taken together, these
and other findings suggest that the distinct state of 'restful alertness'
experienced during the TM technique may be triggering self-repair
homeostatic mechanisms in the body, which lead to the regression of
atherosclerosis," says Schneider.
NIH to sponsor follow-up
studies in Los Angeles
Hector Myers, Ph.D.,
coauthor of the study and Professor of Psychology at UCLA and Professor of
Psychiatry at Drew University, is overseeing three follow-up studies on
the TM program conducted at Drew University in collaboration with
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles and M.U.M. The studies are
supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health's Heart, Lung
and Blood Institute and the National Center for Complementary and
Alternative Medicine. The studies will be evaluating the current findings
in a larger group of African Americans with heart disease and will also be
studying possible mechanisms by which stress reduction through the TM
program may affect the cardiovascular disease process.
Other coauthors of the
current study are: Charles Alexander, Ph.D.; Sanford Nidich, Ph.D.;
Maxwell Rainforth, Ph.D.; and John Salerno, Ph.D., from the Center for
Natural Medicine and Prevention at Maharishi University of Management
College of Maharishi Vedic Medicine; and Robert Cook, M.D., and Chinelo
Haney, project director, from the Department of Radiology and
Biobehavioral Research Center at Drew University in Los Angeles.
American Heart Association
journal STROKE publishes report in March issue
For more information visit
CNMP's website at:
http://www.mum.edu/CNMP/
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This page was last updated on 04 December 2006 21:18:58
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