Nighttime city lights illustrating study on artificial light's link to higher cardiovascular risk.
Bild generiert von KI

Study links nighttime artificial light to higher cardiovascular risk

Bild generiert von KI
Fakten geprüft

A preliminary analysis from Boston researchers ties greater exposure to artificial light at night to heightened stress activity in the brain, arterial inflammation, and a higher risk of major heart events. The work will be presented at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2025 in New Orleans on November 7–10 and frames light pollution as a potentially modifiable environmental factor.

Methods and cohort
- Investigators at Massachusetts General Hospital reviewed records for 466 adults (median age 55) who underwent PET/CT imaging between 2005 and 2008. Participants had no diagnosed heart disease or active cancer at baseline. Nighttime light exposure at each home address was estimated using the 2016 New World Atlas of Artificial Night Sky Brightness, which models ground-level sky brightness from human-generated sources, and outcomes were tracked through 2018, according to an American Heart Association news release.

Key findings
- Higher artificial light at night was associated with increased stress-related activity in the brain, signs of arterial inflammation, and a greater likelihood of major heart events.
- Risk rose with exposure: each standard-deviation increase in nighttime light was linked to about a 35% higher risk of heart disease over five years and 22% over 10 years, after accounting for traditional risk factors and socio-environmental measures such as noise and neighborhood socioeconomic status.
- During follow-up, 79 participants (17%) experienced major heart problems. Risks were higher among those living amid additional stressors (for example, heavy traffic noise or lower neighborhood income).

What researchers and experts say
- “We found a nearly linear relationship … the higher the risk,” said senior author Shady Abohashem, M.D., M.P.H., head of cardiac PET/CT imaging trials at Massachusetts General Hospital and an instructor at Harvard Medical School. He added that modest increases in night light were linked with greater brain and artery stress, and suggested steps such as shielding streetlights or using motion-sensitive lighting, and keeping bedrooms dark while limiting screens before bed.
- “These findings are novel and add to the evidence suggesting that reducing exposure to excessive artificial light at night is a public health concern,” said Julio Fernandez-Mendoza, Ph.D., of Penn State College of Medicine, who was not involved in the research.

Context and caveats
- The analysis is observational and based on previously collected data, so it cannot prove causation. It reflects a single health system and a largely white cohort (about 90%), which may limit generalizability.
- The findings are being presented as a meeting abstract and have not yet been published in a peer‑reviewed journal.

Conference details
- The American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2025 are scheduled for November 7–10 at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans.

Verwandte Artikel

Realistic image of an older adult with signs of disrupted circadian rhythms, like late-afternoon fatigue, linked to higher dementia risk in a recent study.
Bild generiert von KI

Weaker circadian “body clocks” in older adults tied to higher dementia risk, study finds

Von KI berichtet Bild generiert von KI Fakten geprüft

Older adults with weaker or more irregular daily rest-activity rhythms were more likely to be diagnosed with dementia over about three years, according to a study published in *Neurology*. The research also linked later-afternoon activity peaks to higher dementia risk, though it did not establish that disrupted circadian rhythms cause dementia.

A small study suggests that sitting by a window to receive natural daylight can help manage blood sugar levels in people with type 2 diabetes. Researchers found that participants exposed to natural light spent more time within healthy glucose ranges compared to those under artificial lighting. The findings highlight the role of circadian rhythms in metabolic health.

Von KI berichtet Fakten geprüft

Researchers at McMaster University and the Population Health Research Institute report that simple retinal scans, combined with genetic and blood data, may offer a non-invasive window into cardiovascular health and biological aging. An analysis of more than 74,000 people linked simpler eye-vessel patterns to higher heart-disease risk and faster aging. The study, published October 24, 2025, in Science Advances, points to potential early-detection tools that remain under investigation.

Exzessives Trinken mag festlich wirken, doch Kardiologen warnen, dass es das Herz leise schädigen, gefährliche Rhythmusstörungen auslösen, den Blutdruck erhöhen und das Risiko für Herzversagen und Schlaganfall steigern kann – manchmal schon nach einer einzigen Nacht des Übermaßes.

Von KI berichtet Fakten geprüft

A randomized clinical trial suggests that a year of guideline-level aerobic exercise was associated with small but measurable reductions in an MRI-based estimate of “brain age,” leaving participants’ brains looking close to one year younger than those of a usual-care control group.

An analysis of more than 63,000 French adults from the long-running NutriNet-Santé cohort found that plant-based diets built around minimally processed, nutritionally high-quality foods were associated with about a 40% lower risk of cardiovascular disease, while diets heavy in ultra-processed plant products could erase this benefit and were tied to substantially higher risk, according to researchers from INRAE and partner institutions.

Von KI berichtet Fakten geprüft

Researchers report that reduced ATP signaling in the dorsal hippocampus of male mice, driven by changes in the protein connexin 43, can trigger both depression- and anxiety-like behaviors. The study, published in The Journal of Neuroscience, finds that chronic stress lowers extracellular ATP and connexin 43 levels, that experimentally reducing the protein induces similar behaviors even without stress, and that restoring it in stressed animals improves behavioral signs of distress.

 

 

 

Diese Website verwendet Cookies

Wir verwenden Cookies für Analysen, um unsere Website zu verbessern. Lesen Sie unsere Datenschutzrichtlinie für weitere Informationen.
Ablehnen