Cold Weather May Trigger More Heart Attacks

When the temperature drops, the number of heart attacks goes up, according to a massive 16-year study of some 280,000 patients in Sweden. 

"There is seasonal variation in the occurrence of heart attack, with incidence declining in summer and peaking in winter," says the lead author in a press release, though it's "unclear whether this is due to colder temperatures or behavioral changes." 

The team out of Lund University announced its findings at the European Society of Cardiology Congress in Barcelona this week. Using the Swedish myocardial infarction registry (SWEDEHEART), they were able to track every heart attack treated across Sweden between 1998 and 2013. They found significantly more heart attacks in sub-zero temps and fewer in summer months, per Asian Age—to the tune of about four more incidents per day when it's below freezing than when it's above 50 degrees.

Read the full story on Newser.com

More From Newser

Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content