Html code here! Replace this with any non empty raw html code and that's it.

Why the time of day matters during a heart attack

Date:

Share this article:

Del denne artikel:

Researchers suggest that adjusting the body’s immune response by time of day could help limit heart damage after a heart attack.

Heart attacks rarely arrive with warning, but many patients notice a strange pattern: mornings often seem worse.

Doctors have long observed that heart attacks occurring early in the day tend to cause more extensive damage than those at night, even when treatment is similar.

Scientists have been searching for an explanation that goes beyond blood pressure and stress hormones. New research now points to the body’s own immune system as a critical factor.

Timing inside the body

According to a peer-reviewed study published in the Journal of Experimental Medicine, researchers at Yale University School of Medicine found that neutrophils, a type of immune cell, follow a daily rhythm that affects how aggressively they behave.

Also read: The length of your walk may be more important than the number of steps

During daytime hours, these cells are more active and more likely to damage healthy tissue while responding to injury.

Using mouse models of heart attack, the team showed that neutrophils contribute more strongly to heart muscle damage when an attack happens in the morning.

This helps explain why earlier cardiac events often lead to larger areas of injury and poorer recovery.

Switching to night mode

The researchers tested a drug called ATI2341 that interferes with the internal clock of neutrophils.

Also read: How many push-ups you should be able to do to be in good physical shape

By shifting the cells into a “night-like” state, the immune response became less destructive.

Neutrophils moved toward the center of damaged tissue instead of spreading along its edges, limiting harm to surrounding healthy heart muscle.

Importantly, the altered immune behavior did not weaken the body’s ability to fight bacterial or fungal infections, a common risk with immune-suppressing treatments.

Potential clinical impact

The findings suggest that targeting immune cell timing could become a new way to reduce heart damage after a cardiac event, without compromising overall immunity.

Also read: AI helps scientists see the brain more clearly

While the work is still experimental and limited to animal studies, it opens a path toward treatments that fine-tune inflammation rather than shutting it down entirely.

Researchers say future studies will need to explore whether similar strategies are safe and effective in humans, and whether timing treatments to the body’s internal clock could improve recovery after heart attacks.

Sources: Eurekalert and Rupress

Also read: A targeted method improving early melanoma detection

Also read: These ingredients can cause blood pressure to spike within minutes, experts say

Other articles

The first babies born with the help of artificial intelligence

Artificial intelligence is now being used in parts of fertility treatment, creating new opportunities but also new risks.

Alcohol consumption continues to decline across age groups

Drinking is no longer the default for millions of people, and the shift has been building quietly for years.

These things make a relationship strong – without grand gestures

Many people believe that good relationships require grand gestures. Research instead points to something far more down-to-earth.

New approach: Ultrasound may help destroy cancer tissue

Ultrasound has long been a familiar tool in healthcare. Now the technology is taking on a new and more active role in the treatment of cancer.

The first babies born with the help of artificial intelligence

Artificial intelligence is now being used in parts of fertility treatment, creating new opportunities but also new risks.

Alcohol consumption continues to decline across age groups

Drinking is no longer the default for millions of people, and the shift has been building quietly for years.

These things make a relationship strong – without grand gestures

Many people believe that good relationships require grand gestures. Research instead points to something far more down-to-earth.