James Brooks

James read Pharmacology at King’s College London before decamping to Paris to work as a head-hunter for the pharmaceutical industry. Following a stint as a reporter at the B2B magazine Executive Grapevine, James is now studying for an MA Science Journalism at City University. He is the author of three titles for unwritten French novels.

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Find James' blog here My Last Nerve
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Doctors’ bedside manner can set pulses racing

Everything, post-punk songsmith Joe Jackson once ironically warbled, gives you cancer.

But that’s not all. As a pair of studies from American Medical Association journals reveal, otherwise healthy activities like exercise, sex and medical check-ups all carry a minimal cardiac risk.

Exercise and sex

The heart-boosting benefits of regular exercise are long-established. Perhaps for this reason, tales of people dying during or after exercise and sex have only rarely been the preserve of medical journals. Accordingly, it was unknown whether such work-outs can actually trigger heart attacks.

Researchers from American universities Tufts and Harvard pulled together 14 clinical studies from the last 20 years that investigated this question. When the data was pooled they found that “episodic physical activity” put people at 3.5 times the risk of suffering a heart attack and “episodic sexual activity” increased the risk 2.7 times.

Presented like that, the results might strongly favour a lifestyle of complete idleness and abstinence. It is worth remembering that the likelihood of suffering a heart attack at any moment in life is so small that more than trebling this risk is scant cause for concern.

To illustrate this, the researchers performed some supplementary analysis and estimated that if the study participants had all performed an extra hour of physical activity this would have only resulted in a total of 2 or 3 extra heart attacks for every 10,000 years of participant data.

Furthermore, the researchers found that the heart attack risk was reduced for people who enjoyed regular physical exercise: all the more reason, then, not to delay the next trip to the gym (or the bedroom).

Medical check-ups and “white coat hypertension”

High blood pressure, or hypertension, is a much more troubling risk factor for heart attacks and other severe cardiac events.

Yet many people diagnosed with this condition may only have high blood pressure during check-ups with their doctor. This phenomenon is called “white coat hypertension” and its prevalence is demonstrated in a large study by a team of Spanish clinicians.

Over 8,000 patients with hypertension that had proved resistant to treatment had their blood pressure checked at regular intervals under normal living and working conditions. This technique – ambulatory blood pressure monitoring - revealed that 37 per cent of subjects were, in fact, suffering from white coat hypertension.

As drug therapy is not recommended for such people, this study implies that many who currently take medication to reduce high blood pressure do so unnecessarily. Antihypertensive drugs, like all pharmaceutical products, carry their own side effects and risks of adverse reactions.

Although the cardiovascular danger associated with white coat hypertension is much less than for those with genuine high blood pressure, “those who [have] white coat hypertension are not risk free,” according to the study’s lead author, Dr Alejandro de la Sierra.

Nonetheless, the risk here is more one of developing genuine, sustained hypertension. In which case, white coat hypertensives are at risk of developing a risk factor for severe cardiac events.

No need to start singing about how everything gives you heart attacks just yet.

Picture by Chuck Patch (via Flickr)
ResearchBlogging.org
Dahabreh, I., & Paulus, J. (2011). Association of Episodic Physical and Sexual Activity With Triggering of Acute Cardiac Events: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 305 (12), 1225-1233 DOI: 10.1001/jama.2011.336
ResearchBlogging.org
de la Sierra, A., Segura, J., Banegas, J., Gorostidi, M., de la Cruz, J., Armario, P., Oliveras, A., & Ruilope, L. (2011). Clinical Features of 8295 Patients With Resistant Hypertension Classified on the Basis of Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring Hypertension DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.110.168948

Medicines currently account for 10% of the NHS budget

Much has been made – and this is being discussed elsewhere on Elements - of the fact that the current raft of health reforms will encourage the private sector to play a greater role in the new NHS.

But what of those companies whose commercial fate is already inextricably tied with healthcare provision? The pharmaceutical industry, which employs approximately 72,000 people in the UK, is a case in point.

Pharmaceutical companies are frequent targets for criticism, and their profit motive is often seen as a malign influence. But we should not forget that the pharmaceutical industry has, over the last 50 years, provided medications (at a price, of course) that have prolonged and improved the lives of millions of people.

Continue reading »

What are these rodents thinking? Thanks to the RatCAP we may be closer to finding out.

Scientists are able to peer into the minds of fully awake, moving animals, thanks to the development of a miniature brain scanning device.

Normally for a brain scan to work, the subject has to be immobile within the scanner. This isn’t such a problem for humans, who can be told to lie still, but when scientists perform brain scans on laboratory animals, the animals must be anaesthetised or restrained.

As a result, much of our knowledge of how the brain works when animals or humans are moving around (that is, most of the time) is based on extrapolation and conjecture.

Continue reading »

Walk past the shop fronts of Britain and you will take in advertisements and displays filled with images of idealised and perhaps unrealistic beauty. Geared around the basic premise that attraction is based on looks alone, these adverts tap into our more basic urges.

New research may contradict this preconception. Richard Masters went out and about in central London to investigate:

Transcript:

Montage of shop fronts displaying mannequins and photographs of young women, Oxford Street, London

Richard Masters: These days, to step on to the high street is to be assailed by images of a somewhat uniform idea of female beauty, informed by the notion that attractiveness is best understood at the level of physical traits.

Nothing seems more evident: your attractiveness is based on how you look.

Were that not the case our supermarkets would not be so loaded with slimming and beauty products.

For beauty, they say, is only skin deep.

View of the University of Westminster on Regent Street, London

But Dr Viren Swami, based just off London’s main thoroughfare, published a study in the Journal of Social Psychology that might turn those assumptions on their head.

Reconstruction showing man sitting down and consulting photos of women, consulting printed information and writing responses in a questionnaire

In the research heterosexual male volunteers were asked to rate photographs of women with different sized and shaped bodies on their physical attractiveness. One group was given positive personality information about each of the women in the pictures; a second group, negative personality details; and a third group no information at all.

Dr Viren Swami, interviewed in his office by Richard Masters

Viren Swami: We found that across all the different groups men had a certain ideal body size that they preferred in a woman. So, across the groups, regardless of the personality information, they all selected a relatively underweight figure as being attractive.

On the other hand, personality information did have an impact in that positive personality information widened the range of figures that men thought were attractive, whereas negative personality information made that range much smaller.

RM: So what do you think the implications for this work are?

VS: Well, I think the point of the research is that, actually, physical attractiveness is not just dependent on physical looks and that non-physical traits can impact on what people think about you physically.

More broadly, I suppose, the obsession with physical looks only really matters – or matters more – in what we call zero equations context, when you don’t have any personality information about a person.

RM: How do you think your findings can be applied to a society where beauty is sold to us?

VS: In general I think yes, on the one hand we are bombarded with the idea that people have to be attractive and if you’re attractive you’re successful, you’re happy and so on. On the other hand actually in real life social interactions it probably matters very little.

View of Oxford Street

RM: In fact, this is a view which even those who work in shops dedicated to selling products and services aimed at enhancing our appearance would agree with.

Sumin, a beautician, stands outside her place of work

RM: What would you say, in your opinion, is what makes someone beautiful?

Sumin: Umm…cliché, but obviously your personality and kindness.

Jenny, a skincare shop assistant, also standing outside her shop

Jenny: They’ll sell their lash-lengthening mascaras, they’ll sell their blemish-perfecting foundations and people will starve themselves to get into clothes which are a size 8, which obviously I’m quite clearly not…but that doesn’t necessarily make someone beautiful.

Montage of men standing in front of the camera, just off Regent Street, waiting to be interviewed in the vox pop sequence

RM: But let’s not forget, the subjects in Dr. Swami’s study were heterosexual men. Are they really as influenced by personality as the research suggests?

RM: What do you find attractive in woman?

Man 1: Err…personality, mainly: spirit, a bit of spunk.

Man 2: Personality, background.

Man 3: Obviously, beauty being the first issue but intelligence as well.

Man 4: Body shape, that type of thing but once you get over that then I think obviously personality does come into it. Someone may have all the looks but if you’ve got no personality that won’t get you very far.

View of a shop displaying a large poster of a young woman, pan across to Richard Masters, standing nearby and delivering a piece to camera

RM: Despite being surrounded by commercial images emphasising the importance of how we look people do tend to agree with Dr Swami’s view; non-physical cues – our personalities – are important components of physical attractiveness. Beauty, it seems, is a far more complex affair than looks alone. Or is it?

Man 5: What I think’s attractive is the legs and the butt.

ResearchBlogging.orgSwami, V., Furnham, A., Chamorro-Premuzic, T., Akbar, K., Gordon, N., Harris, T., Finch, J., & Tovee, M. (2010). More Than Just Skin Deep? Personality Information Influences Men’s Ratings of the Attractiveness of Women’s Body Sizes The Journal of Social Psychology, 150 (6), 628-647 DOI: 10.1080/00224540903365497

James Brooks and Lorna Powell in heated debate

Of all the heavyweight problems burdening the NHS, mental health may be the most cumbersome.

The Department of Health’s website gives some indication of the challenge faced by the UK’s healthcare system:

At any one time around one adult in six is experiencing symptoms of mental illness and one in four will experience mental illness during their lifetime. Mental illness is the largest single cause of disability in our society and costs the English economy at least £77 billion a year.

And the burden may be growing; the number of antidepressants prescribed nearly doubled over the last ten years while at the same time previously controversial behavioural disorders like attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) became fully legitimate diagnoses, sending an increasing number of people to the doctor’s surgery. Continue reading »

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