
Lifeline
Professor Sian E. Harding(Author)
Octopus Publishing Group
Will be published approx. on 10. June 2027
Book
Paperback/Softback
288 pages
978-1-80419-469-0 (ISBN)
Unfortunately, price unknown
Not yet published
Not available
Description
Advances in modern medicine have added years to our lives, but now the challenge is to add healthy life to those years. At the same time, we are seeing anxiety and depression being diagnosed at unprecedented rates in both young and old, and the treatments can't keep up.
Lifeline offers a roadmap to lifelong wellness, through powerful new research proving our heart and brain to be in constant dialogue, shaping our response to stress, our emotional lives, and our long-term resilience.
This is the very same connection that underlies Broken Heart Syndrome (or Takotsubo Syndrome), where sudden emotional shock can temporarily paralyse the heart. It's also the underlying reason why chronic stress, loneliness and trauma increase cardiovascular risk, and why people with heart disease are more likely to develop anxiety, depression, and even cognitive decline over time.
This new discovery of the connection between the two organs shows how it is reshaping our understanding of the body. We are not built from a collection of individual organs but intricate networks-nerve pathways, hormonal signals, pressure waves-linking heart and brain in fascinating ways.
What has long been intuited across human cultures about this deep inner connection is now a burgeoning body of proven scientific fact. This book from the world leader in this subject matter is the first to explore it in depth and offers a new way to think about our health, resilience, and long-term wellbeing for ourselves and our families.
Lifeline offers a roadmap to lifelong wellness, through powerful new research proving our heart and brain to be in constant dialogue, shaping our response to stress, our emotional lives, and our long-term resilience.
This is the very same connection that underlies Broken Heart Syndrome (or Takotsubo Syndrome), where sudden emotional shock can temporarily paralyse the heart. It's also the underlying reason why chronic stress, loneliness and trauma increase cardiovascular risk, and why people with heart disease are more likely to develop anxiety, depression, and even cognitive decline over time.
This new discovery of the connection between the two organs shows how it is reshaping our understanding of the body. We are not built from a collection of individual organs but intricate networks-nerve pathways, hormonal signals, pressure waves-linking heart and brain in fascinating ways.
What has long been intuited across human cultures about this deep inner connection is now a burgeoning body of proven scientific fact. This book from the world leader in this subject matter is the first to explore it in depth and offers a new way to think about our health, resilience, and long-term wellbeing for ourselves and our families.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (UK-trade)
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 153 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-80419-469-0 (9781804194690)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Professor Sian E. Harding is a renowned cardiac scientist and former Professor of Cardiac Pharmacology at Imperial College London, where she also led the Cardiovascular Division at the National Heart and Lung Institute. A gifted communicator, she has appeared on What's Up Docs with Chris and Xand van Tulleken (October 2025) and has been featured in The Observer, The New Statesman, BBC Science Focus Magazine, and more.
Known for turning complex research into accessible narratives, she is a popular and engaging speaker at literary and scientific festivals, admired for bringing clarity and curiosity to the science of the heart.
Known for turning complex research into accessible narratives, she is a popular and engaging speaker at literary and scientific festivals, admired for bringing clarity and curiosity to the science of the heart.