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Editorials

Temperature and cardiovascular mortality

BMJ 1994; 309 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.309.6961.1029 (Published 22 October 1994) Cite this as: BMJ 1994;309:1029
  1. P Wilmshurst

    Cardiovascular disease is the most common cause of death in most developed countries, but mortality is particularly high in some parts of Britain. These high rates can be lowered only if the causes are understood. Preventive campaigns have concentrated on smoking, hypertension, and hyperlipidaemia. These risk factors explain at most half of all myocardial infarctions.1

    Deaths and hospital admissions for coronary heart disease and stroke are higher in winter than in summer in many temperate countries.2 In some winters mortality has been as much as 70% higher than in the summers. The size of the winter excess is related to the difference in environmental temperature. Excess winter cardiovascular mortality has fallen in recent years, but it remains numerically far more important than other causes of winter deaths such as respiratory infections or hypothermia.3 Seasonal fluctuations in cardiovascular events are greater in Britain than in some other countries with wider temperature variations and colder winters, and this suggests that the excess winter deaths may be preventable.2 Lesser seasonal variations may be related to more constant indoor temperatures in those countries. In Britain excess winter mortality is greatest in socially deprived people who have the worst domestic heating and the highest overall mortality.

    Seasonal variations in vascular events do not necessarily result in an increase in annual mortality. Deaths in winter might have been going to occur later that year. Excess winter deaths will have a real effect on mortality only if the deaths occur so prematurely that they appreciably shorten life expectancy in people who would otherwise have died from another disease.

    In Europe annual mortality from cardiovascular disease increases progressively from Mediterranean countries to Scandinavia. Inherited susceptibility, diet, and prevalence of smoking are obvious predisposing factors which might vary between countries. Big variations in cardiovascular mortality also, however, occur within national boundaries of many European countries and cannot be explained by these factors. Higher rates within countries correlate with increasing latitude and decreasing temperature.4 Environmental temperature, rainfall, and socioeconomic variations accounted for 41% of the inter-town variance in deaths from coronary heart disease in a study in England and Wales in the 1970s.5 The standardised mortality ratios for two towns differed on average by 7% for each 1°C temperature difference, while the other two variables had less effect on mortality. The seasonal and geographical data suggest that low environmental temperature has an important effect on cardiovascular mortality.

    There are several possible mechanisms. Environmental temperature has an inverse relation with blood pressure.6 The mean blood pressures of populations in cold parts of the country may possibly be higher than in warmer areas. Certainly the difference between summer and winter temperatures in Britain results in a difference of about 5 mm Hg. Sustained differences in blood pressure of this order are associated with at least a 21% difference in coronary events and at least a 34% difference in stroke.7 A pharmacological reduction of blood pressure of this amount is associated with a reduction in coronary events by 14% in patients with hypertension and a greater than 20% difference in the rate of fatal myocardial infarction in patients with left ventricular dysfunction.8,9

    A raised blood pressure in a cold environment has several adverse effects. It alters the ratio of myocardial oxygen supply to demand. It increases the ventricular wall stress, cardiac work, and oxygen requirements, but it reduces mechanical efficiency and may impair coronary blood flow, particularly in people with fixed stenoses. Consequently cold can precipitate myocardial ischaemia.

    Peripheral vasoconstriction induced by the cold may cause acute pulmonary oedema by overloading the left ventricle even in people without coronary stenoses, but particularly in those predisposed to hypertension.10 Since vasodilating drugs have a beneficial effect on survival in patients with impaired left ventricular function, the long term effects of the high preload and afterload induced by a cold environment would be expected to have an adverse effect on survival.

    The effects of vasoconstriction in the cold are not confined to the myocardium. The external work done by the heart is dissipated by friction of blood flow through vessels, by shock losses of energy at bends and branch points, and by damping of pulsatile flow by the vessel walls. Unless the heart fails, during peripheral vasoconstriction the main haemodynamic change is increased arterial pressure. Systolic pressure increases more than diastolic so that pulse amplitude is generally increased, but there is usually little change in the cardiac output or the pulse rate.11 These rises in the blood pressure and pulse pressure increase the forces acting to produce deformation of the vessel wall. The unaltered cardiac output passing through constricted vessels results in greater rates of flow in the small vessels. Shock loss of energy and friction are increased. Shear at the vessel surface increases. The resulting vascular damage may have acute and chronic effects. Arterial dissection may be the initiating event in a number of acute cardiovascular syndromes, including myocardial infraction, unstable angina, some cerebrovascular syndromes, and rupture of the aorta. Hypertension is itself atherogenic. Possible initiating mechanisms include repeated minor injuries to the vessel wall and release of vasoactive substances as a result of increased shear.12

    The excess number of coronary events in cold climates may also be related to blood clotting. The plasma concentration of fibrinogen is inversely related to the environmental temperature, but part of the rise in fibrinogen concentrations in the winter may be the result of seasonal respiratory infections.13,14 The seasonal variations in fibrinogen concentrations due to temperature changes may be half that resulting from smoking.13 In cold conditions the plasma concentrations of some clotting factors are increased, as are platelet count and in vitro platelet aggregation. *RF 11,13–15* A reduced plasma volume and increased blood viscosity during cold exposure also tend to promote thrombosis.11,15 Whether these factors have a role in atherogenesis is uncertain. Experiments have produced contradictory results on how environmental temperature affects lipid metabolism, but cold can adversely alter plasma lipid concentrations, making abnormal thrombosis more likely and having a potential chronic atherogenic effect.14

    All these data suggest that at least part of the excess mortality from cardiovascular diseases in some parts of Britain is due to those areas being relatively cold. For the north to achieve reductions in cardiovascular mortality to the rates present in the warmer south will require greater improvements in other risk factors to compensate for the influence of climate. How far social measures such as improvements in poor heating and home insulation would have an impact on cardiovascular mortality in cold parts of the country is uncertain.

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