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

Patients with heart failure need specialist care

2013-11-01
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Press Office
pressinfo@ki.se
46-852-486-077
Karolinska Institutet
Patients with heart failure need specialist care

New research from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden shows that patients with heart failure have high mortality and often are undertreated. According to a study, published in the scientific periodical JACC, many more of these patients would benefit from advanced treatment by heart specialists – something that could be decided by a simple evaluation of five common risk factors for early death due to heart failure.

Heart failure affects 2-3% of the overall population and over 10% of the elderly worldwide, and is associated with high risk for early death and reduced quality of life. Drug therapy improves symptoms and reduces mortality and is well used. However, modern heart failure pacemakers, heart pumps and also heart transplantation are of great benefit in selected patients, but are poorly utilized. Earlier studies have shown that, a major reason is that heart failure patients are generally cared for by generalist doctors with limited awareness of these treatments.

In the present study, a team comprising researchers at Sweden's Karolinska Institutet, Linköping University, Stockholm South General Hospital and Karolinska University Hospital analysed data from 10,000 patients from the large Swedish Heart Failure Registry. First researchers showed that early death in these patients was related to heart failure (rather than for example age) suggesting that better treatment for heart failure would reduce mortality.

Second, the researchers defined 5 risk factors for mortality: poor pump capacity, poor kidney function, low blood count and absent treatment with the drugs ACE inhibitors and beta blockers. If any one of these risk factors was present in a given patient, the mortality was so high that the patient would potentially benefit from a heart failure pacemaker, heart pump and heart transplantation. This risk persisted after adjustment for a large number of other factors, such as patients' age, general health and other factors.

"Currently, less than 5% of patients with heart failure receive heart failure pacemakers and many fewer receive heart pumps or transplantation. Our findings suggest that many more need these treatments and should be referred to heart failure specialists for evaluation", says study leader Dr Lars H. Lund of Karolinska Institutet.

Karolinska Institutet and Stockholm County Council have initiated the cooperative "Project 4D", aiming to improve knowledge building within healthcare and research regarding four diagnoses, among them heart failure. The current study was financed by the Swedish Heart-Lung Foundation, the Stockholm County Council and the Swedish Association of Local Authorities and Regions.



INFORMATION:



Publication: 'Triage of Patients with Moderate to Severe Heart Failure: Who Should be Referred to a Heart Failure Center?', Tonje Thorvaldsen, Lina Benson, Marcus Ståhlberg, Ulf Dahlström, Magnus Edner, Lars H. Lund, Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC), online 25 October 2013.

View the abstract: http://www.jaccjournaloftheacc.com/article/S0735-1097(13)05753-7/abstract

Contact the Press Office and download images: ki.se/pressroom

Karolinska Institutet - a medical university: ki.se/english



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New IOF review provides guidance on fracture prevention in cancer-associated bone disease

2013-11-01
New IOF review provides guidance on fracture prevention in cancer-associated bone disease International Osteoporosis Foundation Working Group outlines guidelines, treatment options and care pathways to help prevent osteoporosis and fractures in cancer ...

Nationwide disparities of deaths reported to coroners

2013-11-01
Nationwide disparities of deaths reported to coroners A LEADING detective turned university researcher has discovered huge nationwide disparities in the numbers of deaths reported to coroners. It could mean that in some areas, inquests into unnaturaldeaths ...

Double-pronged attack could treat common children's cancer

2013-11-01
Double-pronged attack could treat common children's cancer A dual-pronged strategy using two experimental cancer drugs together could successfully treat a childhood cancer by inhibiting tumour growth and blocking off the escape routes it uses to become resistant ...

Sugar intake is not directly related to liver disease

2013-11-01
Sugar intake is not directly related to liver disease Despite current beliefs, sugar intake is not directly associated with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, according to a new study in Gastroenterology, the official journal of the American Gastroenterological ...

LSUHSC simulation or team training improves performance & patient safety

2013-11-01
LSUHSC simulation or team training improves performance & patient safety New Orleans, LA – A study conducted by an inter-professional team of LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans faculty found that simulation-based operating room team training ...

Neuroscientists determine how treatment for anxiety disorders silences fear neurons

2013-11-01
Neuroscientists determine how treatment for anxiety disorders silences fear neurons Study in mice may aid in the development of more effective treatments for anxiety disorders BOSTON (October 31, 2013, 12 noon ET) — Excessive fear can ...

Pitt treats gum disease by bringing needed immune cells to inflamed tissue

2013-11-01
Pitt treats gum disease by bringing needed immune cells to inflamed tissue PITTSBURGH, Nov. 1, 2013 – The red, swollen and painful gums and bone destruction of periodontal disease could be effectively treated by beckoning the ...

GenSeq: Updated nomenclature for genetic sequences to solve taxonomic determination issues

2013-11-01
GenSeq: Updated nomenclature for genetic sequences to solve taxonomic determination issues An improved and expanded nomenclature for genetic sequences is introduced that corresponds with a ranking of the reliability of the taxonomic identification of the source specimens. ...

Problem of gender differences on physics assessments remains unsolved

2013-11-01
Problem of gender differences on physics assessments remains unsolved The mystery of why women consistently score lower than men on common assessments of conceptual understanding of physics remains poorly understood In a new synthesis of past work, researchers found ...

Designing an acoustic diode

2013-11-01
Designing an acoustic diode Novel design for a device that would transmit sound in 1-way may lead to brighter, clearer ultrasound images and improve diagnosis and therapy WASHINGTON, D.C. Nov. 1, 2013 -- Most people know about ultrasound through its role ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Jeonbuk National University researchers develop novel dual-chemical looping method for efficient ammonia synthesis

New study sheds light on stroke recovery via exercise-induced migration of mitochondria

SEOULTECH researchers develop sodium-based next-generation smart electrochromic windows

Data-driven analysis reveals three archetypes of armed conflicts

Heart disease, stroke deaths down, yet still kill more in US than any other cause

Light switches made of ultra-thin semiconductor layers

Creative talent: has AI knocked humans out?

Sculpting complex, 3D nanostructures with a focused ion beam

A year after undermining Bredt’s rule, UCLA scientists have made cage-shaped, double-bonded molecules that defy expectations

Human activities drive global dryland greening

PeroCycle announces new appointments as it builds a world-class board for meaningful climate impact

Magnetic avalanches power solar flares

LeapSpace goes live: the Research-Grade AI-Assisted Workspace built on trusted science

DNA tests reveal mysterious beluga family trees

Strategic sex: Alaska’s beluga whales swap mates for long-term survival

How early cell membranes may have shaped the origins of life

Cannabis legalization is driving increases in marijuana use among U.S. adults with historically lower consumption rates

Multifunctional dipoles enabling enhanced ionic and electronic transport for high‑energy batteries

Triboelectric nanogenerators for future space missions

Advancing energy development with MBene: Chemical mechanism, AI, and applications in energy storage and harvesting

Heteroatom‑coordinated Fe–N4 catalysts for enhanced oxygen reduction in alkaline seawater zinc‑air batteries

Meta-device for precision lateral displacement sensing

Plasma-guided mitotane for the treatment of adrenocortical carcinoma: adjuvant care to advanced disease

Theoretical study of laser-enhanced nuclear fusion reactions

Social environment impacts sleep quality

Optimized kinetic pathways of active hydrogen generation at Cu2O/Cu heterojunction interfaces to enhance nitrate electroreduction to ammonia

New design playbook could unlock next generation high energy lithium ion batteries

Drones reveal how feral horse units keep boundaries

New AI tool removes bottleneck in animal movement analysis

Bubble netting knowledge spread by immigrant humpback whales

[Press-News.org] Patients with heart failure need specialist care