American Heart Association: Brain Emotional Activity Linked to Blood Vessel Inflammation in Recent Heart Attack Patients
May 07, 2020
May 07, 2020
DALLAS, Texas, May 7 -- The American Heart Association issued the following news release:
People with recent heart attacks have significantly higher activity in the amygdala, the brain area involved in stress perception and emotional response, along with greater inflammation in arteries resulting from increased bone marrow activity, a hallmark of plaque build-up -- and these are all capable of returning to near-normal, according to preliminary research presented at the American Hear . . .
People with recent heart attacks have significantly higher activity in the amygdala, the brain area involved in stress perception and emotional response, along with greater inflammation in arteries resulting from increased bone marrow activity, a hallmark of plaque build-up -- and these are all capable of returning to near-normal, according to preliminary research presented at the American Hear . . .