BHF data reveals early heart disease deaths rise to highest level In 2022, over 39,000 people in England died prematurely of cardiovascular conditions The British Heart Foundation (BHF) has revealed new data showing that early heart disease deaths in England have risen to the highest level seen since 2008. New figures show that over 39,000 people in England died prematurely of cardiovascular conditions, including heart attacks, coronary heart disease and stroke, in 2022. Cardiovascular disease is a general term for conditions that affect the heart or blood vessels in the body. In the UK, there are currently around 7.6 million people living with heart and circulatory diseases. Before 2012, the number and rate of deaths from these types of conditions among people under the age of 75 were falling. However, recent statistics have shown that the rate of premature deaths from cardiovascular disease has increased in England for three years. ...
A new trial led by researchers at the University of Edinburgh has revealed that a new blood test in emergency departments can spot more patients with injuries to their heart muscle, producing lower rates of future heart attacks and deaths. Funded by the British Heart Foundation (BHF) and published in the BMJ journal, the new blood test could improve diagnosis for one in five patients who have a heart muscle injury. In the UK, heart attacks are responsible for around 100,000 hospital admissions every year. During a heart attack or heart injury stemming from other heart conditions, a protein known as troponin is released into the blood. The new test detects very low levels of troponin more accurately than older versions of the tests, which have been used by doctors for years to help diagnose these conditions in people with chest pains and related symptoms. Researchers analysed the results of ...
Novo Nordisk’s blockbuster weight loss injection Wegovy could prevent up to 1.5 million heart attacks, strokes and other cardiovascular events in the U.S. over 10 years, according to a study released this week. Researchers from the University of California, Irvine, also found that Wegovy could result in 43 million fewer Americans with obesity over a decade. Notably, the study was partly funded by Novo Nordisk. The study results complement the initial data the Danish company released last week from a large clinical trial, which found that Wegovy slashed the risk of serious heart problems and heart-related death by 20%. Novo Nordisk’s trial studied overweight or obese patients with established cardiovascular disease, while UC Irvine’s study examined similar patients, albeit without the disease. Together, the results suggest that Wegovy and, likely, similar obesity drugs have significant health benefits beyond shedding unwanted pounds. Physicians and Wall Street analysts hope that could eventually ...
Dive Brief QuidelOrtho’s recall of a test to detect heart attacks was labeled Class I by the Food and Drug Administration, the most serious type of recall, the agency said in a Monday notice. The San Diego-based diagnostic manufacturer flagged a problem with the tests in late May after receiving reports that the tests showed lower than expected troponin levels, which could result in delayed or missed diagnosis of a heart attack. The recall affects nearly 7,800 tests, and QuidelOrtho is instructing clinicians to immediately discontinue using the product, and instead use a different test or send patients to another testing site. Dive Insight Quidel’s Triage Cardiac Panel is intended to help diagnose heart attacks. The test uses a blood sample, and can deliver results in about 20 minutes, according to the company’s website. It is important to detect heart attacks quickly to ...
Your heart needs a continuous supply of oxygen-rich blood for nourishment and a heart attack occurs when the heart muscles do not get enough oxygen-rich blood. The blood flow in the heart muscles should be restored quickly to avoid permanent damage, else you will suffer a heart attack.
The EST identified 30% of patients with a blood supply/demand mismatch Researchers from King’s College London (KCL) have revealed that the revival of a heart stress test was successful when put to the test against contemporary standards in heart care. Published in the Journal of American College of Cardiology, the electrocardiogram exercise stress test (EST) was accurate in identifying abnormalities in the heart’s blood supply. Previously, the EST was a popular way of assessing patients with angina – attacks of chest pain caused by reduced blood flow to the heart. The test required a patient to exercise on a treadmill or stationary bike while a cardiologist distinguished whether the blood supply to the heart muscle matched the demand during physical stress. However, due to its perceived inaccuracies, the EST test fell out of favour. KCL researchers, however, questioned this after discovering that an abnormal EST was successful in picking up ...
Heart attacks are the leading cause of death globally, with their incidence on the rise. Despite this, many high-risk individuals either remain unidentified or fail to adhere to preventive treatments. Notably, the period preceding a heart attack is marked by significant biological changes. For instance, the risk of a heart attack doubles in the month following a divorce and increases fivefold in the week after a cancer diagnosis. Based on the hypothesis that several vital biological processes are active during the months before a heart attack, researchers have now suggested that these could be detected using a simple blood test. Researchers at Uppsala University (Uppsala, Sweden) have developed an online tool that, when used in conjunction with standard blood test results, can help clinicians determine if a person is at an elevated risk of experiencing a heart attack within the next six months. The study involved analyzing blood samples from ...
Barbra Streisand’s Women’s Heart Alliance wants people to know when to ask, “what’s up, doc?” In a new PSA campaign, the nonprofit is trying to educate women about the gender-specific symptoms of heart attacks to stop them dying at a higher rate than men. The PSA moves quickly to catch the viewer’s attention, opening with the line: “Listen up, women and everyone who loves a woman, heart disease kills one of us every 80 seconds, and we die of heart attacks at twice the rate of men.” Those statistics are displayed in unmissable, screen filling text as the voice-over reads them out. In the next section, the voice-over explains a reason for the discrepancy in health outcomes, stating that “when a woman is having a heart attack, our symptoms are too often missed, or dismissed, even by doctors.” The situation is “a serious crisis.” The alliance sees education as the ...
Research led by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Leicester Biomedical Research Centre (BRC) and Universite Paris Cite, and supported by worldwide partners in Canada, the USA and Australia, has identified new genes that are associated with an increased risk of a type of heart attack primarily affecting young to middle-aged women. The results are published in Nature Genetics today, 29 May 2023. SCAD – or Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection – is when a bruise or bleed occurs in the wall of a coronary artery, cutting off the blood to part of the heart. This leads to a heart attack. Unlike other types of heart attack, SCAD is most common in women under the age of 60 and is a leading cause of heart attacks around the time of pregnancy. Furthermore, people who have had a SCAD tend to be generally healthy and SCAD can sometimes happen ...
Marcia Frellick April 17, 2023 People diagnosed with influenza are six times more likely to have a heart attack within the first week that they test positive for the influenza virus than they are in the year before or the year after, a new study indicates. This work, led by Annemarijn de Boer, PhD, with the Julius Center for Life Sciences and Primary Care, UMC Utrecht in Utrecht, the Netherlands, comes 5 years after a 2018 study by Canadian researchers found a similar strong connection between flu and heart attack in people hospitalized for heart attacks. Annemarijn de Boer, PhD The current findings will be presented by de Boer at the at this year’s European Congress of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases in Copenhagen, Denmark, on April 18. de Boer’s team explains that the connection between influenza and heart attack lies in the influenza virus’s ability to increase the stickiness or clotting of blood. ...
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