skip menus and go right to content
MHMR/TC Tree Logo Image
Home Button
About Our Agency Button
Mental Health Services Button
Mental Retardation Services Button
Addiction Services Button
Early Childhood Intervention Button
Consumer Information Button
Cotracted Provider Services Button
Business Opportunities Button
Career Opportunities Button
Calendar of Events Button
News Button


 SEARCH

 MHMR of Tarrant County

3840 Hulen Street
Fort Worth, Texas 76107
Tel:(817)569-4300
Email Contact


 RESOURCES


 PROFESSIONAL RESOURCES


 
 
Image of Horizontal Bar
Title 
Image, Mental Health Mental Retardation of Tarrant County
Image of Horizontal Bar
 
 

Terrorism & War

Topic Home · Related:  
Combat Exposure Tied to Chronic High Blood Pressure
(HealthDay News)
by By Ed EdelsonHealthDay Reporter
Updated: Sep 14th 2009

 

new article illustration

MONDAY, Sept. 14 (HealthDay News) -- U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan who go into combat are more likely to develop high blood pressure over the long term than those who serve in supporting roles, a new military study finds.

"Deployment with multiple combat exposures appeared to be a unique risk factor for newly reported hypertension," Nisara S. Granado, an epidemiologist at the Naval Health Research Center in San Diego and lead author of a report in the Sept. 14 online issue of Hypertension, said in a statement.

Hypertension, or high blood pressure, thus joins the list of problems resulting from constant exposure to the life-threatening experience of combat. They include post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, substance abuse and attention deficits.

Nisara and her colleagues drew on the records of 36,061 service members, including 8,829 deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan between 2001 and 2003. After a three-year follow-up, the researchers found that those who reported multiple combat exposures were 33 percent more likely to report they had high blood pressure than those spared combat.

Troops sent to combat areas but not exposed to combat were 23 percent less likely to report high blood pressure than those who saw action, the researchers said.

The finding comes as no surprise, said Dr. Kirk Garratt, director of interventional cardiovascular research at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

"We know that the shock response to combat involves the release of catecholamines," Garratt said. Catecholamines are the "fight-or-flight" hormones, such as adrenaline.

"People in combat have stress syndromes afterward, and those stress syndromes involve high releases of adrenaline," Garratt said. "There are changes in the vascular tree that affect blood pressure. This finding makes perfect sense."

One very significant finding was that "for the deployers reporting combat exposure, only a certain type of combat exposure -- personally witnessing or being exposed to a person's death because of war or disaster -- was statistically significantly associated with newly reported hypertension," said Simon A. Rego, an assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City.

"Thus, it appears that deployment and even combat exposure in general do not increase the risk of hypertension," Rego said. "Rather, it is being deployed and then experiencing or witnessing multiple stressful combat exposures involving a person's death."

Among the factors associated with high blood pressure were obesity, which tripled the risk; ethnicity, with blacks 84 percent more likely to report high blood pressure than whites, and general health. Those reporting poorer general health were 68 percent more likely to say they had high blood pressure.

"The finding will likely increase in significance in terms of the potential health consequences related to the operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, in particular as the wars continue on and soldiers face multiple deployments and an increased risk of stressful combat exposures," Rego said.

More information

Common risk factors for high blood pressure are listed by the U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.

 

 BASIC INFORMATION

 DETAILED INFORMATION

 NEWS

 LINKS

 BOOK REVIEWS