PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Heart disease risk appears associated with breast cancer radiation

2013-10-29
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Karin Eskenazi
ket2116@cumc.columbia.edu
212-342-0508
The JAMA Network Journals
Heart disease risk appears associated with breast cancer radiation Among patients with early stages of breast cancer, those whose hearts were more directly irradiated with radiation treatments on the left side in a facing-up position had higher risk of heart disease, according to research letter by David J. Brenner, Ph.D, D.Sc, of Columbia University Medical Center, New York, and colleagues.

Several reports have suggested links between breast cancer radiation and long-term cardiovascular-related deaths, according to the study background.

Researchers examined the radiation treatment plans of 48 patients with stage 0 through IIA breast cancer who were treated after 2005 at the New York University Department of Radiation Oncology. They calculated the association between radiation treatment factors, such as mean cardiac dose, cardiac risk, treatment side, body positioning and coronary events.

According to study results, the highest coronary risks were seen for left-sided treatment in women of high baseline risk treated in the supine (lying down, head facing up) position. The lowest risks were for right-sided treatment in low-baseline risk women. In left-sided radiation, prone (lying down, facing down) position reduces cardiac doses and risks, while body positioning has little effect in right-sided therapy (where the heart is always out of field).

"Because the effects of radiation exposure on cardiac disease seem to be multiplicative, the highest absolute radiation risks correspond to the highest baseline cardiac risk," the authors conclude. "Consequently, radiotherapy-induced risks of major coronary events are likely to be reduced in these patients by targeting baseline cardiac risk factors (cholesterol, smoking, hypertension), by lifestyle modification, and/or by pharmacological treatment." ### (JAMA Intern Med. Published online October 28, 2013. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.11790. Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com.)

Editor's Note: Please see article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and support, etc.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Poverty in early childhood appears associated with brain development

2013-10-29
Poverty in early childhood appears associated with brain development Poverty in early childhood appears to be associated with smaller brain volumes measured through imaging at school age and early adolescence, according to a study published by JAMA Pediatrics, a JAMA ...

1, 2, buckle my shoe

2013-10-29
1, 2, buckle my shoe International study documents importance of language to learning math Talk to your toddler. And use numbers when you talk. Doing so may give a child a better head start in math than teaching her to memorize 1-2-3 counting routines. That's ...

Study finds high rate of lower back injuries in young athletes

2013-10-29
Study finds high rate of lower back injuries in young athletes Injuries may put athletes at risk for long-term back problems MAYWOOD, Il. – Lower back injuries are the third most common injuries suffered in athletes under age 18, according to a study presented ...

Local communities produce high-quality forest monitoring data, rivals that of professional foresters

2013-10-29
Local communities produce high-quality forest monitoring data, rivals that of professional foresters Study finds half of UN projects do not engage local communities in monitoring, argues REDD+ projects that integrate community participation are more ...

Smokers worldwide more likely to think about kicking their habit on Mondays

2013-10-29
Smokers worldwide more likely to think about kicking their habit on Mondays Findings published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association, Internal Medicine SAN DIEGO, Calif. (Oct. 28, 2013)—Forget New Year's; a study published today in the Journal ...

Scientists wary of shale oil and gas as US energy salvation

2013-10-29
Scientists wary of shale oil and gas as US energy salvation Boulder, Colo., USA - After 10 years of production, shale gas in the United States cannot be considered commercially viable, according to several scientists presenting at the Geological Society of America meeting ...

Breakthrough in study of aluminum should yield new technological advances

2013-10-29
Breakthrough in study of aluminum should yield new technological advances CORVALLIS, Ore. – Researchers at Oregon State University and the University of Oregon today announced a scientific advance that has eluded researchers for more than 100 years ...

Super-thin membranes clear the way for chip-sized pumps

2013-10-29
Super-thin membranes clear the way for chip-sized pumps The ability to shrink laboratory-scale processes to automated chip-sized systems would revolutionize biotechnology and medicine. For example, inexpensive and highly portable devices that process ...

Obese women alter diets in response to additional calories from soft drinks

2013-10-29
Obese women alter diets in response to additional calories from soft drinks Obese women voluntarily reduce what they eat in response to additional soft drinks being added to their diets – a new 4 week study finds(1). 41 obese women took part in the study, co-ordinated ...

Snakes on the brain: Are primates hard-wired to see snakes?

2013-10-29
Snakes on the brain: Are primates hard-wired to see snakes? Was the evolution of high-quality vision in our ancestors driven by the threat of snakes? Work by neuroscientists in Japan and Brazil is supporting the theory originally put forward by Lynne Isbell, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

AI overconfidence mirrors human brain condition

Successful snus cessation led to increased body weight and blood pressure

The effect of physical fitness on mortality is overestimated

Seeing well-designed gardens could relax us almost immediately because we look at them differently

Models predict severity of pneumonia in kids to help guide treatment

Mindfulness course effective in people with difficult-to-treat depression

Insurer exits after the Inflation Reduction Act Part D redesign

Researchers gain insights into the brain’s ‘dimmer switch’

Brain scans reveal what happens in the mind when insight strikes

Loss of Medicare Part D subsidy linked to higher mortality among low-income older adults

Persistent mucus plugs linked to faster decline in lung function for patients with COPD

Incomplete team staffing, burnout, and work intentions among US physicians

The key to spotting dyslexia early could be AI-powered handwriting analysis

New nanoparticle could make cancer treatment safer, more effective

A new study provides insights into cleaning up noise in quantum entanglement

Artificial intelligence and genetics can help farmers grow corn with less fertilizer

Daratumumab may help cancer patients with low physical function to live longer, study finds

Stranger things: How Netflix teaches economics

Energy and memory: A new neural network paradigm

How we think about protecting data

AAN issues Evidence in Focus article on Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene therapy

Could a mini-stroke leave lasting fatigue?

Is it time to redefine the public health workforce? New research proposes a broader, more inclusive approach

Tiny gas bubbles reveal secrets of Hawaiian volcanoes

Gelada monkeys understand complex "conversations" involving distress calls and prosocial comforting responses, exhibiting surprise when such vocal exchanges are manipulated to violate their expectatio

New poison dart frog discovered in the Amazon's Juruá River basin is blue with copper-colored legs, and represents one of just two novel Ranitomeya species in a decade

Shifting pollution abroad is a major reason why democratic countries are rated more environmentally friendly compared to non-democratic states

Groups of AI agents spontaneously form their own social norms without human help, suggests study

Different ways of ‘getting a grip’

Handy octopus robot can adapt to its surroundings

[Press-News.org] Heart disease risk appears associated with breast cancer radiation