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Is buck fever a heart hazard?


You don't need to struggle through a triathlon triathlon, athletic event made up of three contests. Since the 1970s the term has come to mean especially a race combining swimming, bicycling, and running. A notable example is Hawaii's Ironman Triathlon, held since 1978, which features a 2.  to endanger your heart. Deer hunting can put men with clogged arteries at risk of a heart attack, hints a second study reported at the 69th Scientific Sessions of the American Heart Association American Heart Association (AHA),
n.pr a national voluntary health agency that has the goal of increasing public and medical awareness of cardiovascular diseases and stroke, and thereby reducing the number of associated deaths and disabilities.
 in New Orleans New Orleans (ôr`lēənz –lənz, ôrlēnz`), city (2006 pop. 187,525), coextensive with Orleans parish, SE La., between the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain, 107 mi (172 km) by water from the river mouth; founded .

Susan Haapaniemi of William Beaumont Hospital This article is about William Beaumont Hospital, Michigan. For for the hospital in Dublin, see Beaumont Hospital, Dublin.

William Beaumont Hospital is a regional medical system in the greater Detroit, Michigan area.
 in Royal Oak, Mich., and her colleagues wondered whether the stress of a hunt could trigger hazardous changes in heart rate. They decided to find out by giving 25 men portable heart monitors to wear during a deer hunt. Seventeen of these hunters had previously been diagnosed with atherosclerosis, a condition in which fatty plaque clogs the arteries.

The researchers' data revealed that deer hunting puts rigorous demands on the cardiovascular system cardiovascular system: see circulatory system.
cardiovascular system

System of vessels that convey blood to and from tissues throughout the body, bringing nutrients and oxygen and removing wastes and carbon dioxide.
. For some men, the adrenaline surge occasioned merely by sighting a deer pushed their heart rate into the danger zone. One man's heart rate soared from 78 beats per minute beats per minute Cardiac pacing The unit of measure for the frequency of heart depolarizations or contractions each minute–or pulse rate  to a whopping 168-while he was sitting in a tree, Haapaniemi told Science News.

Success in hunting also proved exceptionally strenuous. The American Heart Association recommends a target zone for exercising that puts the heart within 50 to 75 percent of its desirable maximum rate. Shooting a deer sent heart rates up to 118 percent of that level, Haapaniemi says. Dragging a dead deer back to the road sent some hunters' heart rates up to 116 percent of the desirable maximum, Haapaniemi noted, adding that hunters often drag a deer for about an hour.

High heart rates strain the heart. For people with already clogged arteries, that strain could lead to a heart attack, Haapaniemi says.

The researchers urged hunters with heart disease to avoid dragging a deer, the hunting activity that makes the most sustained demand on the heart.

Gerald F. Fletcher of the Mayo Clinic Mayo Clinic: see Mayo, Charles Horace.

Mayo Clinic

voluntary association of more than 500 physicians in Rochester, Minnesota. [Am. Hist.: EB, 11: 723]

See : Medicine
 in Jacksonville, Fla., says that people who love to hunt should condition themselves ahead of time so they avoid triggering a high heart rate.
COPYRIGHT 1996 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Biomedicine; deer hunting strains heart
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Nov 30, 1996
Words:323
Previous Article:A heart made of iron - not! (triathlon participation may injure heart)(Biomedicine)(Brief Article)
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