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Ecstasy and agony: Too much happiness can literally break your heart, doctors say

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A joyous event such as the birth of a child can trigger a dangerous ballooning in the left ventricle of the heart, researchers say. Photo: Reuters

Joyful events - the birth of a child, a big win by your team - can trigger a dangerous condition called the “broken heart syndrome”, doctors and researchers reported Thursday.

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Takotsubo syndrome, as it is also known, involves the sudden weakening of heart muscles, causing the left ventricle - the chamber which pushes oxygen-rich blood through the body - to balloon out abnormally at the bottom.

Besides acute chest pain and shortness of breath, the condition can lead to heart attacks and death.

It has long been known that an unexpected emotional shock - typically something unpleasant, such as the death of a spouse, or a violent argument - can provoke such an attack.

But statistics were lacking, and no one had ever investigated whether an intensely happy event could give the same result.

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In 2011, a pair of researchers in Switzerland - Christian Templin and Jelena Ghadri, both of University Hospital Zurich - set up a global registry to track cases of the syndrome, which is fairly rare.

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