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Cardiovascular Health

Your Bedroom Glow Might be Quietly Damaging Your Heart

November 7, 2025 By Namita Nayyar (Editor in chief)

Your bedroom glow might be quietly damaging your heart

Exposure to artificial light at night appears to trigger stress in the brain and inflammation in the arteries, raising heart disease risk. Researchers say even modest light increases could have long-term cardiovascular consequences.

Nighttime Light and Heart Health

A preliminary analysis to be presented at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2025 found that greater artificial light at night correlated with increased brain stress signals, inflamed blood vessels, and higher heart disease risk. The conference will take place Nov. 7-10 in New Orleans and features new developments, research, and practice updates in cardiovascular science.

The investigators described artificial light at night, often called nighttime light pollution, as nearly universal in modern urban settings. This first-of-its-kind work combined brain imaging and satellite measurements to outline a biological pathway that may connect nighttime brightness with cardiovascular risk.

“We know that environmental factors, such as air and noise pollution, can lead to heart disease by affecting our nerves and blood vessels through stress. Light pollution is very common; however, we don’t know much about how it affects the heart,” said study senior author Shady Abohashem, M.D., M.P.H., head of cardiac PET/CT imaging trials at Massachusetts General Hospital and an instructor at Harvard Medical School in Boston.

All participants had the same combined Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography (PET/CT) scan. This study of 450 adults only included subjects without heart disease and no active cancer. “This is a routine imaging test at my hospital,” Abohashem said. “The CT portion provides detailed anatomy, while the PET portion reveals metabolic activity in tissues. Using both imaging techniques together allows for the measurement of brain stress activity and arterial inflammation in a single scan.”

Key Results: Higher Light Exposure, Higher Risk

People exposed to higher levels of artificial light at night had higher brain stress activity, blood vessel inflammation and a higher risk of major heart events. This information was collected from medical records and evaluated by two cardiologists who were blinded, meaning they were unaware of any information that could influence their decisions.

The greater the artificial night light exposure, the higher the risk of heart disease development. Every standard deviation increase in light exposure was associated with about 35% and 22% increased risk of heart disease over five- and 10-year follow-up periods, respectively. These associations remained after accounting for traditional risk factors and other socio-environmental exposures like noise pollution and socioeconomic status.

In addition, these heart risks were higher among participants who lived in areas with additional social or environmental stress, such as high traffic noise or lower neighborhood income.
Over a 10-year follow-up period, 17% of participants had major heart conditions.

Stress Pathways and Vessel Inflammation

“We found a nearly linear relationship between nighttime light and heart disease: the more night-light exposure, the higher the risk. Even modest increases in night-time light were linked with higher brain and artery stress,” Abohashem said. “When the brain perceives stress, it activates signals that can trigger an immune response and inflame the blood vessels. Over time, this process can contribute to hardening of the arteries and increase the risk of heart attack and stroke.”

However, to counter the effects of artificial light at night, he suggested that cities could reduce unnecessary outdoor lighting, shield streetlamps or use motion-sensitive lights. On a personal level, “people can limit indoor nighttime light, keeping bedrooms dark and avoiding screens such as TVs and personal electronic devices before bed,” he said.

“These findings are novel and add to the evidence suggesting that reducing exposure to excessive artificial light at night is a public health concern,” said Julio Fernandez-Mendoza, Ph.D., DBSM, FAHA, who is on the writing committee of Multidimensional Sleep Health: Definitions and Implications for Cardiometabolic Health: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association.

Source: https://www.sciencedaily.com/

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