Anger and other strong emotions can trigger potentially deadly heart rhythms in certain vulnerable people. Previous studies have shown that earthquakes, war or【C1】______ the loss of a World Cup Soccer match can increase【C2】______ of death from a sudden cessation(停止) of heartbeat,【C3】______ the heart stops circulating blood. 'It's【C4】______ been shown in all different ways that when you put a whole【C5】______ under a stressor that sudden death will increase,' said Dr. Rachel Lampert, whose study【C6】______ in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 'Our study starts to look【C7】______ how this really affects the electrical system of the heart,' Lampert said. She and colleagues studied 62 patients with heart【C8】______ and implantable heart defibrillators (发生器) or ICDs that can【C9】______ dangerous heart rhythms or arrhythmias(心律失常) and deliver an electrical shock to restore a normal heart【C10】______ . 'These were people we know already had some 【C11】______ to arrhythmia,' Lampert said in a telephone interview. Patients in the study took part in an exercise in which they【C12】______ a recent angry episode【C13】______ Lampert's team did a test called T-Wave Alternans that【C14】______ electrical instability in the heart. Lampert said the team specifically asked questions to get people to relive the angry【C15】______ . 'We found in the lab setting that yes, anger did increase this electrical instability in these patients,' she said. 'The people who had the【C16】______ anger-induced electrical instability were 10 times more【C17】______ than everyone else to have an arrhythmia in follow-up,' she said. Lampert said the study【C18】______ that anger can be deadly, at least for people who are already vulnerable to this type of electrical disturbance in the heart. 'It says yes,【C19】______ really does impact the heart's electrical system in very【C20】______ ways that can lead to sudden death,' she said. 【C1】