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Traffic noise increases stroke risk

Last Updated 27 January 2011, 16:46 IST
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And the risk increased 27 per cent among those who are over 65 years, found the study by researchers at the Institute of Cancer Epidemiology in Copenhagen, Denmark.
The researchers said they had accounted for air pollution and other factors like differences in lifestyle, meaning they believed there was a genuine association between noise and stroke risk.

Dr Mette Sorensen, who led the research, said: “Our study shows that exposure to road traffic noise seems to increase the risk of stroke.

“Previous studies have linked traffic noise with raised blood pressure and heart attacks, and our study adds to the accumulating evidence that traffic noise may cause a range of cardiovascular diseases,” Dr Sorensen was quoted as saying by the Telegraph.

For their study, the researchers analysed data from Danish citizens, aged between 50 and 64 year, who participated in a lifestyle survey conducted between 1993 and 1997.
They examined the medical histories and residential addresses of the participants and after following them for about a decade, the researchers found that a total of 1,881 suffered a stroke during the study period.

The participants lived in homes with estimated noise levels ranging from 40dB—the sound of a quiet conversation—to 82dB—that of a busy street.

For older people, there appeared to be a step-change in their risk of stroke at about 60dB, the researchers found.

Dr Sorensen said about one in five strokes in urban areas could be due to living in noisy homes.He said: “If we assume that our findings represent the true risk, and the association between traffic noise and stroke is causal, then an estimated 8 per cent of all stroke cases, and 19 per cent of cases in those aged over 65, could be attributed to road traffic noise.”

He emphasised that the study only looked at urban homes, which were likely to be noisier than rural ones, and that it could not prove that noise itself was a causal factor in stroke risk.

Exposure to noise is thought to increase blood pressure and cause changes in levels of stress hormones, which may contribute to the increased risk of stroke. In addition, exposure to traffic noise may also lead to sleep disturbances, which can contribute to stroke risk, the researchers said.The study is published in the European Heart Journal.

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(Published 27 January 2011, 16:46 IST)

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