The heart and brain have often been portrayed as opposing forces, but they’re more connected than you might think. Take the case of Dr. Daniel Amen’s grandfather, Daniel Ara.
Dr. Amen remembers his grandfather being happy and smiling all the time. But that changed when he had a heart attack at age 69. His grandfather started crying more often, couldn’t get a good night’s sleep, and lost his spark. Eventually, he was diagnosed with depression and given antidepressant medication.
At the time, Dr. Amen was still in college and medical school and was just becoming aware of the strong link between heart attack and depression. “I wish I had known then what I know now about sugar, blood flow, heart disease, and depression,” he writes in his book The End of Mental Illness.
This is just one example of the heart-brain connection. Scientists and medical experts are exploring the intricate relationship between heart disease and mental health in an emerging field called psychocardiology.
For example, as you saw with Dr. Amen’s grandfather, heart problems can affect brain function and mental health, contributing to cognitive decline and mood disorders. On the flip side, studies are increasingly revealing that chronic stress, anxiety, depression, and trauma can increase inflammation, elevate blood pressure, and ultimately raise the risk of heart disease.
This blog delves into the science behind psychocardiology, how mental health influences cardiovascular health (and vice versa), and all-natural strategies to protect both your brain and heart.
Heart conditions may increase the risk for psychiatric illnesses, while mental health conditions (as well as high stress levels) can negatively impact heart health.
A 2018 article in the Psychiatric Times noted that, though interactions between the heart and brain have been recognized for thousands of years, the subject continues to gain complexity. Today, they are believed to be more multifaceted—and much more closely interrelated—than experts once thought.
In 2013, the medical journal Future Cardiology reported on the connection between cardiovascular disease and psychiatric illnesses such as mood and anxiety disorders. Authors pointed to numerous studies confirming that these frequently overlap in an individual (also called high comorbidity).
This comorbidity, they added, was bidirectional. In other words, heart conditions can increase the risk for psychiatric illnesses, while mental health conditions (as well as high stress levels) can negatively impact heart health. Psychocardiology explores this heart-mind connection.
By 2022, an editorial in Frontiers in Psychiatry listed several recent studies that examined this link. They led to various conclusions supporting the brain-heart connection:
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Researchers have established that the heart-brain connection is forged through the autonomic nervous system. Therefore, cardiac function “can be profoundly altered by…central autonomic commands, including those associated with stress, physical activity, arousal, and sleep.”
It helps explain how mental health affects heart health—and vice versa. Some examples include:
A 2017 report on heart disease and depression noted that “adults with a depressive disorder or symptoms have a 64 percent greater risk of developing coronary artery disease (CAD); and depressed CAD patients are 59 percent more likely to have a future adverse cardiovascular event, such as a heart attack or cardiac death.”
As a crucial part of the autonomic nervous system, the vagus nerve plays a major role in the brain-heart connection. This can help guide beneficial treatments.
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For example, a 2020 study explored vagus nerve stimulation as a therapy for cardiovascular issues. Authors noted that because the vagus nerve helps maintain physiological homeostasis, it interacts with the reflex pathways that regulate cardiac function.
The study further pointed out that vagus nerve activity, called vagal tone, has been linked with heart rate variability, which can reflect the body’s stress resilience and cardiovascular health. The vagus nerve also regulates sleep, mood, pain, stress, and hunger, making it a major factor in mental health.
Press Play to Discover More About Heart Health Risk Factors
In this video, Amen Clinics integrative nutritionist Cindy Santa Ana discusses the risk factors that increase your chances of getting heart disease, as well as some simple tips to reduce your risk.
Click below to tune in:
Fortunately, many all-natural solutions will help boost both mental and heart health. These include:
Consistent workouts strengthen both brain and heart health. Exercise has been shown to reduce symptoms of depression and help prevent Alzheimer’s. Exercise improves mood by stimulating feel-good endorphins, increasing blood flow to the brain, reducing anxiety and stress, and promoting better sleep.
As most Americans know, exercise boosts cardiovascular health, too. The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute confirms that it strengthens the heart while reducing numerous risk factors for coronary heart disease and heart attacks.
Make food your medicine by choosing brain- and heart-friendly ingredients. Add depression-fighting “mood foods” to your diet, like berries, saffron, avocados, and dark leafy greens. Consume omega-3 fatty acids, probiotics, and lean protein. And make sure to stay hydrated with plenty of water.
Avoid foods that trigger inflammation, such as those often found in the Standard American Diet: trans fats, fried foods, sugary sweets, alcohol, and ultra-processed foods. They deteriorate brain function while promoting obesity and cardiovascular disease.
Soothing the vagus nerve through practices like meditation, deep breathing, and mindfulness help calm both the heart and mind.
A 2018 study found several beneficial effects of these types of vagus nerve stimulation exercises. They improved cardiopulmonary fitness, immune function, psychological wellness, and cognitive performance, while lowering stress and anxiety.
Intimate relationships have been shown to lower heart disease risk and reduce stress—as long as they’re healthy and positive. In addition to romantic partners, everything from friendships to support groups can help improve heart and brain health.
As researchers continue to unveil the future of psychocardiology, exciting developments are possible. The medical field is increasingly using integrative medicine, an approach practiced at Amen Clinics, to holistically treat the entire body through personalized heart-and-brain health plans.
For decades, we’ve known that lifestyle factors such as diet and exercise are crucial for optimal heart health. But we now know that managing mental health is just as important for protecting your heart over the long term.
Though the field of psychocardiology is relatively new, its body of research is growing. And it’s fostering constant advances in our understanding of how stress affects heart health, how mental health and heart disease are linked, and how heart health intersects with mental health symptoms like anxiety and depression.
Look at this close connection as enabling a win-win: When you make wise lifestyle choices and reduce stress, you’re not only improving your brain function and mental health. You’re boosting your cardiovascular fitness, which in turn promotes mental wellness—resulting in a longer, happier, healthier life.
Depression, anxiety, PTSD, and other mental health conditions can’t wait. At Amen Clinics, we provide personalized, science-backed treatment plans designed to target the root causes of your symptoms. Our 360-approach includes brain SPECT imaging, clinical evaluations, innovative therapeutic techniques, medications (when necessary), and holistic lifestyle recommendations to promote the health of your brain, body, and mind. Speak to a specialist today at 888-288-9834 or visit our contact page here.
Psychocardiology: Understanding the Heart-Brain Connection: Part 1. Angelos Halaris, MD. September 20, 2018. Psychiatric Times, Vol. 35, Issue 9. https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/psychocardiology-understanding-heart-brain-connection-part-1
Halaris, A. (2013). Psychocardiology: Moving Toward a New Subspecialty. Future Cardiology, 9(5), 635–640. https://doi.org/10.2217/fca.13.49
Byrne Don, Kahl Kai G., Alvarenga Marlies E. Editorial: Psychocardiology then and now – the genesis of a discipline. Frontiers in Psychiatry, VOLUME 13, 2022, https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychiatry/articles/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.988393. DOI=10.3389/fpsyt.2022.988393
Silvani, G. Calandra-Buonaura, R. A. L. Dampney, and P. Cortelli, “Brain–heart interactions: physiology and clinical implications,” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, vol. 374, no. 2067, May 2016.
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Johns Hopkins Medicine, Anxiety and Heart Disease, by Una D McCann, M.D. https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/conditions-and-diseases/anxiety-and-heart-disease
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Heart disease and depression: A two-way relationship. April 16, 2017. https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/news/2017/heart-disease-and-depression-two-way-relationship
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National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Physical Activity and Your Heart: Benefits. https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/heart/physical-activity/benefits
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