Long hours, sleepless nights cause heart attacks: research
Working more than 60 hours a week and a regular lack of sleep may double the risk of having a heart attack, says new research.
The study looked at 260 Japanese men aged between 40 and 79 who had been admitted to hospital for a first time heart attack but survived.
They were compared with another group of 445 men with no history of heart attack.
The researchers obtained details of the men's weekly working hours, number of days off and amount of sleep within the last month and during the past year.
They also looked at potential risk factors for heart attack, including lifestyle, weight and conditions such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol and diabetes.
The results show that men working more than 60 hours a week face double the risk of a heart attack when compared with those who work 40 hours or less each week.
Sleeping an average of five or less hours a night and having a frequent lack of sleep, defined as two or more days a week of under five hours, is also associated with a doubling or tripling of the risk.
In particular frequent lack of sleep and fewer days off in the preceding month also significantly increase the chances of having a heart attack.
The study, which ran from 1996 to 1998, is featured in the journal Occupational and Environmental Medicine, published by the British Medical Association.
The authors, led by Ying Liu of the National Cancer Centre in Tokyo, state: "Overtime work is known to increase blood pressure and heart rate, and induce cardiac or psychological symptoms - such as chest pain, depression and fatigue."





