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You can really die from a broken heart!

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Press Trust of India London

Researchers found that men are hit harder when they lose their wife, with the level of shock suffered comparable to the post-traumatic stress disorder suffered by war veterans.

The study shows for the first time that a heart attack is a bigger psychological blow to the victim's wife or husband than any other illness and highlights the need for giving them special care and attention, the Daily Express' reported.

Research in Denmark shows that spouses of people who suffer a sudden heart attack have an increased risk of depression, anxiety or suicide even if their partner survives.

It found that if they do lose their partner, people were three times as likely to be taking antidepressants within a year.

 

For people whose husband or wife survived, use of antidepressants still went up by 17 per cent.

The researchers, whose findings are published in the European Heart Journal, used Danish registries to compare 16,506 spouses of people who died from a heart attack between 1997 and 2008 with 49,518 spouses of people who died from other causes.

They also matched 44,566 spouses of patients who suffered a non-fatal heart attack with 131,563 spouses of people admitted to hospital for another non-fatal condition.

They then looked at the use of antidepressants

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First Published: Aug 22 2012 | 6:05 PM IST

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