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Dying of a Broken Heart Can Happen

Grief-stricken woman's near-death experience sheds light on the phenomenon

By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter


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FRIDAY, July 6 (HealthDay News) -- A 50-year-old woman's near-death experience at her sister-in-law's grave is providing insight into how stress can suddenly kill people by shutting down their hearts.

The unidentified woman, whose case was described in a new report, suffered an electrical short-circuit that would have caused cardiac arrest if she hadn't had a defibrillator in her chest. The device recorded the exact time, and her doctor later discovered that she suffered an attack as her brother's wife was being buried.

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"It tells us that a person's emotional state, operating at a subconscious level, can interact in someone with serious heart disease to trigger a cardiac event," said Dr. Michael Sweeney, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. He wrote about the case in the July 2007 edition of the journal HeartRhythm.

The woman's brush with death could have been coincidental. But it came exactly a week after her father's unexpected death; the sister-in-law collapsed and died the same day after hearing that her father-in-law had died.

Doctors have spent centuries trying to understand why some people die when hit with sudden devastating news or on the anniversary of a stressful event, Sweeney said. According to him, psychiatrists have studied the phenomenon for a century.

However, he said, "for the most part, the medical community discounts the notion of a human being dying of a broken heart."

The case of the bereaved woman is unusual, because the defibrillator was there to help stabilize her heart at the exact moment it began to malfunction. The woman's defibrillator, which is designed to shock the heart into a normal rhythm, is the same kind implanted in the chest of Vice President Dick Cheney, noted Sweeney, who is also an electrophysiologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston.

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Copyright © 2007 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 7/6/2007

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SOURCES: Michael O. Sweeney, M.D., associate professor, medicine, Harvard Medical School, and clinical electrophysiologist, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston; Samuel Sears, Ph.D., professor, psychology and internal medicine, East Carolina University, Greenville, N.C.; Thomas W. Kamarck, Ph.D., professor, psychology and psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh; July 2007 HeartRhythm


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