Bacteria: the missing link between psych stress and heart attack

natasa778

Senior Member
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Scientists believe they have an explanation for the axiom that stress, emotional shock, or overexertion may trigger heart attacks in vulnerable people. Hormones released during these events appear to cause bacterial biofilms on arterial walls to disperse, allowing plaque deposits to rupture into the bloodstream, according to research published in published today in mBio®, the online open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology.
"Our hypothesis fitted with the observation that heart attack and stroke often occur following an event where elevated levels of catecholamine hormones are released into the blood and tissues, such as occurs during sudden emotional shock or stress, sudden exertion or over-exertion" said David Davies of Binghamton University, Binghamton, New York, an author on the study.

Davies and his colleagues isolated and cultured different species of bacteria from diseased carotid arteries that had been removed from patients with atherosclerosis. Their results showed multiple bacterial species living as biofilms in the walls of every atherosclerotic (plaque-covered) carotid artery tested.

In normal conditions, biofilms are adherent microbial communities that are resistant to antibiotic treatment and clearance by the immune system. However, upon receiving a molecular signal, biofilms undergo dispersion, releasing enzymes to digest the scaffolding that maintains the bacteria within the biofilm. These enzymes have the potential to digest the nearby tissues that prevent the arterial plaque deposit from rupturing into the bloodstream.

According to Davies, this could provide a scientific explanation for the long-held belief that heart attacks can be triggered by a stress, a sudden shock, or overexertion

...
To test this theory they added norepinephrine, at a level that would be found in the body following stress or exertion, to biofilms formed on the inner walls of silicone tubing.

"At least one species of bacteria - Pseudomonas aeruginosa - commonly associated with carotid arteries in our studies, was able to undergo a biofilm dispersion response when exposed to norepinephrine, a hormone responsible for the fight-or-flight response in humans," said Davies. Because the biofilms are closely bound to arterial plaques, the dispersal of a biofilm could cause the sudden release of the surrounding arterial plaque, triggering a heart attack.

To their knowledge, this is the first direct observation of biofilm bacteria within a carotid arterial plaque deposit, says Davies. This research suggests that bacteria should be considered to be part of the overall pathology of atherosclerosis and management of bacteria within an arterial plaque lesion may be as important as managing cholesterol.

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2014-06/asfm-bhe060514.php
 

SilverbladeTE

Senior Member
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again, not "psychological mumbo jumbo bullshit" but way the physical body reacts to cope with stress, stress NOT being the psych's idiot idea of that term, but ANY form of stressor in proper sense, because our bodies are the product of 4 billion years of evolution, during which, stress, as load, damage, reaction to things, is a vital feedback and response mechanism

Our bodies are like self regulating engines.
Emotional stress shows "load", fight or flight, fear etc, the body responds to such to prepare to run away, deal with possible incoming trauma, or even I suspect, things like plagues, the reaction to such to get away, to heighten the immune system etc

However, the body is so incredibly complex as to stagger the mind, the Large Hadron Collider and physics are by comparison *simple*
Bacteria that are not true symbiots may well "watch" for events that indicate weakening of the immune system, to take advantage, or, because of complexity, have unintended reactions, possibly even reactions that kill the organism, but thus release toxins into the body.

Psychs need to read more engineering, IMHO
 

Sushi

Moderation Resource Albuquerque
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I think this is the original article:

Bacteria Present in Carotid Arterial Plaques Are Found as Biofilm Deposits Which May Contribute to Enhanced Risk of Plaque Rupture
  1. Bernard B. Lanter,
  2. Karin Sauer,
  3. David G. Davies
+Author Affiliations

  1. dgdavies@binghamton.edu.
  2. Editor Antonio Cassone, Istituto Superiore Di Sanita
  3. ...IMPORTANCE The association of bacteria with atherosclerosis has been only superficially studied, with little attention focused on the potential of bacteria to form biofilms within arterial plaques. In the current work, we show that bacteria form biofilm deposits within carotid arterial plaques, and we demonstrate that one species we have identified in plaques can be stimulated in vitro to undergo a biofilm dispersion response when challenged with physiologically relevant levels of norepinephrine in the presence of transferrin....
 
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