SENIOR JOURNAL.COM - Senior Citizens Information and News

Front Page    Search     Contact Us     Advertise in Senior Journal


SeniorJournal.com

INDEX


FRONT PAGE

PAGE TWO
More Headlines

 • General Features

 • Find Help

 • SENIOR ALERTS

 • Baby Boomers

 • Odds & Ends

Health-Fitness

 • Aging

 • Alzheimer's & Dementia

 • Fitness

 • Health/Medicine

 • Medical Research

 • Nutrition/Vitamin

Government

 • Politics

 • Medicare

 • Medicare Drug Program

 • Medicare Q&A - Dear Marci

 • Medicaid

 • Social Security

 • Social Security, Medicare Q&A

 • Social Security Reform

Enjoying Life

 • Books

 • Entertainment

 • Features

 • Grandparents

 • Senior Statistics

 • Senior Stars

 • Sex & Seniors

 • Sports

 • Travel

 • Senior Volunteers

On The Web

 • Links - Senior

 • Senior Friendly Business Links

 • Sites We Like

Elderly Issues

 • Elder Care

 • Assistance for Elderly

 • Housing

Money 

 • Discounts

 • Guarding Your Wealth for Seniors

 • Money Matters

 • Reverse Mortgage

 • Retirement

Thinking

 • Opinions



Senior Journal: Today's News and Information for Senior Citizens & Baby Boomers

More Senior Citizen News and Information Than Any Other Source - SeniorJournal.com

• Go to more on Health & Medicine or More Senior News on the Front Page

 

Click here to vitamins without a pill.


 
 

E-mail this page to a friend!

Senior Citizen Health & Medicine

Very Early Signs of Atherosclerosis Signaling Future Heart Failure Detected by MRI Tagging

Early coronary artery disease could be producing blood flow problems causing heart muscle damage, even though the patients don't feel symptoms

June 21, 2006 - Middle-age and older people who feel healthy, but who have early signs of atherosclerosis, are more likely to exhibit subtle changes in heart function, detectable through a special MRI technique, which may signal the beginning of heart failure, according to a new study in the June 20, 2006, issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

 

Related Stories

 
 

Nutrition, Vitamins, Supplements for Seniors

Hardening of Arteries Significantly Reduced by Vegetable Diet

Study of vegi-fed mice results in 38 percent atherosclerosis risk reduction

June 17, 2006 – Hardening of the arteries (atherosclerosis) is one of the conditions most feared by senior citizens, who are the most frequent victims. This artery-clogging condition significantly increases the risk of heart attack and severe pain. Although experts have long advocated a diet of whole grains, fruits, and vegetables, and low in salt and saturated fat, a new study says it may be possible to reduce the risk by 38 percent with a vegetable diet. Read more...

Seniors, Women, Minorities Less Likely to Get Acute Heart Attack Help

Study of transfers to larger hospitals says sickest being by-passed

March 13, 2006 – If you are a senior citizen, a female or a minority and suffer an acute heart attack, you are not as likely to be transferred to a larger hospital that offers life-saving procedures to immediately open clogged arteries, Duke University Medical Center cardiologists have found. Read more...

Heart Really Does Hurt When Older Couples Fight

Artery disease tied to hostility for wives, loss of control for husbands

March 3, 2006 – When older couples fight, no one wins. Wives are likely to suffer hardening of the coronary arteries, and so are men, if they feel controlled or try to act in a controlling manner. Those are key findings of a study of 150 healthy, older, married couples – mostly in their 60s. Read more...

Heart Disease Undiagnosed in Many Women Because Plaque Spreads

They mistakenly appear to have clear arteries after angiography

Jan. 31, 2006 - In as many as 3 million U.S. women with coronary heart disease, cholesterol plaque may not build up into major blockages, but instead spreads evenly throughout the artery wall. As a result, diagnostic coronary angiography reveals that these women have “clear” arteries — no blockages — incorrectly indicating low risk. Despite this, many of these women have a high risk for heart attack, according to newly published research from the National Institutes of Health. Read more...


Read more on Health & Medicine

 

"The novelty of this study is that we were taught that the way atherosclerosis causes myocardial (heart wall) dysfunction is by causing heart attacks or chest pain or other clinical manifestations of disease," said Joγo A. C. Lima, M.D., F.A.C.C. from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland.

"Here we have evidence that subclinical atherosclerosis - atherosclerosis that has not manifested clinically - is influencing left ventricular function, regional myocardial function, before any clinical outcome is detected. This is a paradigm shift in the way we understand how myocardial dysfunction is produced. And that speaks to the importance of the report," added Lima.

Researchers at six field centers, including first author Verτnica R. S. Fernandes, M.D., studied 500 consecutive MRI studies of participants (209 women and 291 men) in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA).

 

More About Atherosclerosis

 
 

There are two types of this disease:

Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is a condition in which fatty deposits (called plaque) build up along the walls of the arteries that carry blood to the arms and legs.

Coronary artery disease means narrowing of the coronary arteries (arteries that supply blood to the heart).

Read more - click here

 

The MESA trial is a prospective population-based observational cohort study of men and women from four different ethnic groups (Caucasian, African-American, Hispanic, and Chinese), ages 45 to 85 years old, who were free of clinical cardiovascular disease at enrollment.

Using a relatively new and extremely sensitive technique known as MRI tagging, the researchers were able to detect subtle changes in the movement of the walls of the left ventricles, the main pumping chambers, of the hearts of participants.

They compared the results of the MRI heart wall motion studies with ultrasound measurements of the carotid arteries of the participants. Specifically, the researchers measured the intima-media (innermost coat) thickness of the carotid artery. Increased thickness is known to be an early sign of atherosclerosis.

Even though the participants did not have any symptoms of cardiovascular disease, increased intima-media thickness was related to reduced heart pumping function.

"Previous studies have looked at the relationship of atherosclerosis and heart failure. We are showing, in a population of people who have never had symptoms, an association between atherosclerosis and fine changes in the heart contraction," Dr. Lima said.

"These results, which were quite unexpected actually, suggest that we should perhaps implement preventive strategies more vigorously and earlier than we thought."

Possible interventions could include treatment to lower cholesterol levels or using ultrasound to watch for progression of atherosclerosis.

Dr. Lima pointed out that this study could show only that signs of atherosclerosis and reduced heart function tend to go together. Further study will be needed to see if the results can predict the future health of the participants.

"That's what we are doing now. We are following this population to see if this really relates to people developing heart failure," Dr. Lima said.

This study was not designed to explain the observed association, but the researchers say other work suggests some leading possibilities. Early atherosclerosis in major blood vessels could be producing blood flow problems and thus causing heart muscle damage, even though the participants don't feel symptoms. Blood vessel problems could be interfering with blood flow in the tiny vessels in the heart muscle.

It is also possible that the early atherosclerosis and heart function abnormalities are both connected to some underlying issue that was not identified in this study.

Tasneem Z. Naqvi, M.D., from the UCLA School of Medicine in Los Angeles, California, who was not connected with this study, said that a "strength of the study is the strong methodology, using recent and more robust techniques for the evaluation of heart function."

"The study findings might explain the etiology of heart failure in several patients who are otherwise labeled as having idiopathic cardiomyopathy. Decreased coronary flow reserve in the face of increased demand such as occurs during exercise or mental stress may lead to reduced heart function during stress and then eventually at rest."

"It would be interesting to find out whether exercise or mental stress challenge may bring out this abnormality even earlier. The findings suggest that screening by imaging, rather than by blood tests, is the way to detect presence of subclinical atherosclerosis as well as its effect on heart function," Dr. Naqvi said.

Notes:
The six field centers participating in this study were Wake Forest University, North Carolina; Columbia University, New York; Johns Hopkins University, Maryland; University of Minnesota, Minnesota; Northwestern University, Illinois, and University of California at Los Angeles, California.
This study was supported by a NHLBI grant and MESA study contracts. Dr. Lima is also supported by the Reynolds Foundation, and Dr. Fernandes was a recipient of a research grant from CAPES, Ministry of Education, Brazil Government.

 

 

 

Search for more about this topic on SeniorJournal.com

Google Web SeniorJournal.com

Click to More Senior News on the Front Page

Copyright: SeniorJournal.com

     Back to Top

 

Published by New Tech Media - www.NewTechMedia.com

Other New Tech Media sites include CaroleSutherland.com, BethJanicek.com, www.DeweySquare.com, SASeniors.com, DrugDanger.com, etc.

E-mail - editor@SeniorJournal.com