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Following are the opening paragraphs of: EurekAlert Public release date: 11-Nov-2003 Title: Menâs social isolation linked to higher heart disease risk The full text is at http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2003-11/aha-msi102203.php Contact: Carole Bullock [EMAIL PROTECTED] 214-706-1279 American Heart Association American Heart Association meeting report Orlando, Fla. â Older men who have few personal relationships may have increased risk of heart disease, according to a report presented today at the American Heart Association's Scientific Sessions 2003. In a study examining factors that influence successful aging, researchers found that among a group of men in their 70s, social isolation was linked to increased levels of C-reactive protein (CRP), interleukin-6 (IL-6) and fibrinogen in the blood. These blood components are elevated during inflammation. Recent research has suggested that inflammation in the body is a risk marker for cardiovascular disease. People with elevated CRP and fibrinogen have higher risks for heart disease and stroke. "Social isolation may influence these different inflammatory markers and may be one way social relationships influence our health," said lead author Eric B. Loucks, Ph.D., research fellow at Harvard School of Public Health in Boston. He is a co-investigator for this endeavor in the ongoing MacArthur Successful Aging Study, a research project which follows 1,189 men and women from Durham, N.C., Boston, and New Haven, Conn. ---snip--- Mike
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