I have heard countless stories of elderly couples
who—after many years of marriage—die within hours or days of one another. The story of my own grandparents is not far
from that.
“They died of a broken heart,” we say of the person
who died shortly after the loss of their spouse.
I can personally attest to both emotional and physical
changes in my grandfather after my grandmother passed. An internal switch flipped to the “off”
positon inside him and he simply shrunk and faded away.
Yesterday, I saw, on several news sources, that
medical professionals have concluded broken hearts are a real thing.
Yes, a broken heart can kill you.
According to an article posted by Maggie Fox at NBC
News, the scientific name for a broken heart is takotsubo cardiomyopathy or
takotsubo syndrome. The word takotsubo
means “octopus pot” in Japanese. The
reference to an octopus pot is due to the way the heart disease physically changes
the shape of the heart.
A broken heart appears very much like a heart attack
on the electrocardiogram, but it is not.
Takotsubo syndrome is thought to be triggered by brain signals to adrenal
glands. The signals cause the adrenal
glands to release hormones that alter the rhythm and, ultimately, the shape of
the heart.
The disease is commonly blamed when couples die with a
few days or even hours of each other.
Studies conducted internationally indicate that both physical
and emotional stress can cause the onset of takotsubo syndrome. Men appear to be more likely than women to
die from the disorder.
--Mitchell
Hegman
My mom passed on within 5 months of my dad's death. She missed him too much and just gave up. Things that are in the mind could manifest in the body. Thanks for the info. Very interesting!
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteSo many stories of this...
ReplyDeleteSo many stories of this...
ReplyDeleteInteresting
ReplyDeleteI think it is really interesting!
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