High insulin levels linked to high heart attack risk

In a new study, researchers found that men with genetically higher insulin levels had a higher risk of heart attack and angina.

The research was conducted by a team from The City University of New York and elsewhere.

Men have shorter life expectancy than women, in part due to the higher rates of heart disease among men.

To address this disparity, heart disease is now being considered with the well-established evolutionary biology theory that suggests that the intrinsic drive to achieve reproductive success can sometimes occur at the expense of longevity.

Insulin drives growth and reproduction, and the use of insulin has also long been suspected to play a role in cardiovascular disease.

Insulin acting via the reproductive axis would be expected to have sex-specific effects, which might be relevant to the higher rates of heart disease in men than in women.

However, no-one has previously considered whether insulin might have different effects by sex on cardiovascular disease.

The current study showed that men with genetically higher insulin levels had a higher risk of heart attack and angina, consistent with the theory.

Not only does this study shed new light on the reason for men’s greater vulnerability to heart disease, but it also suggests new interventions for a leading cause of global mortality and raises questions about the best way of managing diabetes so as to reduce the risk of heart disease.

Further study of the role of minimizing insulin—within the healthy range—on heart disease is warranted, particularly to tackle sexual disparities in health.

The lead author of the study is CUNY SPH Professor Mary Schooling.

The study is published in Communications Biology.

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