According
to an estimate, there are about 22 million U.S. workers who are exposed to loud
noise on the job.It is well known that noisy jobs have long been associated
with hearing difficulties.But in the latest study, it has been revealed that
louder work conditions might contribute to risk factors for heart disease as
well.Noise is thought to increase heart risks by causing stress, which in turn
triggers the release of stress hormones like cortisol, and changes in blood
vessels and heart rate, the study team notes in the American Journal of
Industrial Medicine.
Workers
who are exposed to a lot of noise on the job are more likely to develop high
blood pressure and elevated cholesterol, a U.S. study suggests.
“A
significant percentage of the workers we studied have hearing difficulty, high
blood pressure and high cholesterol that could be attributed to noise at work,”
said study co-author Elizabeth Masterson of the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health in Cincinnati, Ohio.
“If
noise could be reduced to safer levels in the workplace, more than 5 million
cases of hearing difficulty among noise-exposed workers could be prevented,”
Masterson added. “This study also provides further evidence of an association
between occupational noise exposure and high blood pressure and high
cholesterol, and the potential to prevent these conditions if noise is
reduced.”
For
the study, researchers examined nationally-representative survey data from
22,906 adults who were employed in 2014.
One
in four workers reported exposure to occupational noise at some point in the
past, and 14 percent had experienced loud work conditions in the previous year.
Industries
with the most noise exposure included mining, construction, and manufacturing.
Overall,
12 percent of participants had hearing difficulties, 24 percent had high blood
pressure, 28 percent had high cholesterol and 4 percent had experienced a major
cardiovascular problem like a heart attack or stroke.
After
accounting for participants’ other risk factors, the researchers attributed 58
percent of the cases of hearing difficulty, 14 percent of the instances of high
blood pressure and 9 percent of the elevated cholesterol cases to exposure to
occupational noise.
The study did not, however,
find a clear link between noisy work conditions and heart disease, heart
attacks or strokes. It’s possible there were too few people with these medical
issues to determine whether the conditions might be associated with
occupational noise, Masterson said.
Hearing
difficulty was linked to all three heart conditions, and it’s possible that
both occupational noise exposure and hearing loss might independently influence
the risk of heart problems, she added.
The
study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether or how
occupational noise exposure might directly cause risk factors for heart
diseases like high blood pressure or elevated cholesterol or lead to heart
attacks and strokes.
Another
drawback is that researchers lacked data on the intensity or duration of noise
exposure, the study team notes.
“The
study itself does not establish a cause and effect relationship between noise
exposure and the coronary heart disease outcomes,” said John Dement, an
occupational health researcher and professor emeritus at Duke University in
Durham, North Carolina.
It’s
unclear, for example, whether noise exposure might cause high blood pressure or
if high blood pressure might be a risk factor for hearing loss with or without
occupational noise exposure, Dement, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by
email.
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