Thursday, May 2, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Your Forehead Wrinkles May Predict Cardiovascular Death Risk

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Aug, 2018 05:29 PM
    The wrinkles on your forehead may not be just an inevitable consequence of ageing, but could also signal an early death due to cardiovascular disease (CVD), researchers have warned.
     
     
    The findings showed that increased deep forehead wrinkles, more than what is typical for their age, could be linked to death atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries due to plaque build-up -- a major contributor to heart attacks and other CVD events.
     
     
    "Forehead wrinkles may be a marker of atherosclerosis. The higher your wrinkle score, the more your cardiovascular mortality risk increases," said Yolande Esquirol, associate professor at the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Toulouse, France. 
     
     
    While the furrows in the brow are not a better method of evaluating heart risk than existing methods, such as blood pressure and lipid profiles, yet they can raise a red flag earlier, at a simple glance, the researchers said.
     
     
    Changes in collagen protein and oxidative stress seem to play a part both in atherosclerosis and wrinkles. Also, blood vessels in the forehead are so small they may be more sensitive to plaque build-up meaning wrinkles could one of the early signs of vessel ageing, they explained.
     
     
    For the new study, the team investigated a different visible marker of age -- horizontal forehead wrinkles -- to see if they had any value in assessing cardiovascular risk in a group of 3,200 working adults. 
     
     
    A score of zero meant no wrinkles while a score of three meant "numerous deep wrinkles".
     
     
    Those who had wrinkle scores of two and three had almost 10 times the risk of dying compared with people who had wrinkle scores of zero, after adjustments for age, gender, education, smoking status, blood pressure, heart rate, diabetes and lipid levels.
     
     
    The results were presented at the ESC Congress 2018, the annual conference of the European Society of Cardiology in Munich.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Google Maps Calorie Feature Yanked Out Of Concern For Users With Eating Disorders

    Google Maps Calorie Feature Yanked Out Of Concern For Users With Eating Disorders
    TORONTO — A mental health advocate says Google made the right decision to shut down a calorie count feature in its map application that critics said could be damaging to users with eating disorders.

    Google Maps Calorie Feature Yanked Out Of Concern For Users With Eating Disorders

    World Obesity Day: Watch Your Waistline As You Binge-Watch

    World Obesity Day: Watch Your Waistline As You Binge-Watch
    Excessive screen time is a concern across the world, says Ramen Goel, Senior Bariatric Surgeon and Director, Center of Bariatric and Metabolic Surgery, Wockhardt Hospitals.

    World Obesity Day: Watch Your Waistline As You Binge-Watch

    Sexual Touch Can Trigger Early Puberty

    A recent study has found that girls hit puberty earlier and suffer significant changes in their brains, if they have been touched intimately.

    Sexual Touch Can Trigger Early Puberty

    Be Beautiful At Every Age With These Make-Up Tips

    Be Beautiful At Every Age With These Make-Up Tips
    Make-up is not only a great way to conceal one's flaws but it also helps in enhancing facial features.

    Be Beautiful At Every Age With These Make-Up Tips

    Just 25 Mins Of Yoga Can Boost Brain Function, Energy Levels

    Just 25 minutes of Hatha yoga and mindfulness meditation can significantly improve brain function and energy levels, suggests a new study.

    Just 25 Mins Of Yoga Can Boost Brain Function, Energy Levels

    Improved Treatment Allowing More HIV-Positive Women To Get Pregnant: Study

    Improved Treatment Allowing More HIV-Positive Women To Get Pregnant: Study
    Another reason could be that women who are on treatment are healthier and may see an unexpected rebound in their fertility

    Improved Treatment Allowing More HIV-Positive Women To Get Pregnant: Study