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Yes, sex can kill you

Sudden bursts of moderate to intense physical activity, such as jogging or having sex, significantly increase the risk of having a heart attack, especially in people who do not get regular exercise, US researchers said.

Doctors have long known that physical activity can cause serious heart problems, but the new study helps to quantify that risk, Dr Issa Dahabreh of Tufts Medical Centre in Boston, whose study appeared online in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

The team analysed data from 14 studies looking at the link between exercise, sex and the risk of heart attacks or sudden cardiac death.

They found people are 3.5 times more likely to get a heart attack or have sudden cardiac death when they are exercising compared to when they are not.

And they are 2.7 times more likely to get a heart attack when they are having sex or immediately afterward compared with when they are not. (These findings do not apply to sudden cardiac death because there were no studies looking at the link between sex and cardiac death.)

Risk fairly high

Jessica Paulus, another Tufts researcher who worked on the study, said the risk is fairly high as such studies go. But the period of increased risk is brief.

"These elevated risks are only for a short period of time (1 to 2 hours) during and after the physical or sexual activity," Paulus said.

Because of that, the risk to individuals over the course of a year is still quite small, she said.

"If you take 1,000 people, each individual session of physical or sexual activity per week can be associated with an increase of 1 to 2 cases of heart attack or sudden cardiac death per year," Paulus said.

She said it is important to balance the findings with other studies showing that regular physical activity reduces the risk of heart attacks and sudden cardiac death by 30%.

"What we really don't want to do is for the public to walk away from this and think exercise is bad," she said.

What it does mean is that people who do not exercise regularly need to start any exercise program slowly, gradually increasing the intensity of the workout over time.

(Reuters HealthJulie Steenhuysen, March 2011)

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Heart centre

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