Stents or bypass surgery more effective for stable patients with high-risk cardiac anatomy
Location of blockages in a patient's heart is a key consideration in selecting the right treatment, University of Alberta cardiologists find
2021-02-18
(Press-News.org) A recent study by University of Alberta cardiologists at the Canadian VIGOUR Centre shows that a particular group of patients with stable ischemic heart disease have better outcomes with percutaneous coronary intervention (also called angioplasty with stent) or coronary artery bypass surgery and medication, versus conservative management with medication alone.
In a study published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, associate professor of medicine and academic interventional cardiologist Kevin Bainey and his team reviewed the patient information of more than 9,000 Albertans with stable ischemic heart disease. While able to function as outpatients, these patients had arteries in the heart that had narrowed and were restricting blood supply. They also had other heart issues--referred to as high-risk cardiac anatomy--including blockages in important locations of the heart's blood vessels, or restriction in the left main artery of the heart.
The data showed that in patients with both stable ischemic heart disease and high-risk cardiac anatomy, coronary revascularization (stents or bypass surgery) led to better health outcomes, including a reduction in the risk of death or heart attack, than a more conservative approach. As well, after one year, the risk of death was 2.7 per cent for patients with revascularization versus 6.8 per cent for those without.
"We strongly believe coronary anatomy is an important prognostic indicator of health outcomes," said Bainey, who is also director of the Adult Cardiac Catheterization and Interventional Cardiology Laboratory and the Interventional Cardiology Fellowship Program. "In a patient who has a higher-risk stress test and is showing symptoms, we think it's valuable to perform a coronary angiogram to get a complete picture, rather than just managing them with medications."
Bainey's study builds on the landmark ISCHEMIA (International Study of Comparative Health Effectiveness with Medical and Invasive Approaches) trial, published in April 2020, which showed that in patients with stable ischemic heart disease, an invasive approach such as stents or bypass surgery did not reduce the risk of death or future coronary events in following years.
While Bainey said he agrees there is a role for conservative management in these patients, high-risk anatomy was not addressed in the ISCHEMIA trial. This prompted him to investigate further, to find out whether Alberta patients with high-risk anatomy might actually benefit from invasive approaches.
"What our results are saying is that medical management is important, but there might be a small group that would benefit from revascularization, and we need to find ways to identify that group of patients," he said.
The results of his study also underline the importance of cardiac anatomy in determining a diagnosis and treatment options--something Bainey hopes more cardiologists will take into consideration when treating patients with stable ischemic cardiac disease.
"The main message I want clinicians to know is that it's important to know the anatomy," Bainey said. "Whether they decide to do a CT scan or send patients for an angiogram, you have to define that anatomy and then make the decision for revascularization or not."
INFORMATION:
[Attachments] See images for this press release:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2021-02-18
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. -Variation in a specific gene could be related to traits that are beneficial to bonding and relationship satisfaction in the first years of a marriage, according to a new study by a University of Arkansas psychologist.
Recent research indicates that a variation called "CC" in the gene CD38 is associated with increased levels of gratitude. Extending that line of work, U of A psychologist Anastasia Makhanova and her colleagues used data from a study of genotyped newlyweds to explore whether a correlation existed between the CD38 CC variation and levels of trust, forgiveness and marriage satisfaction. They found that individuals with the CC variation did report higher levels of perceptions considered beneficial to successful relationships, particularly trust.
Marriage ...
2021-02-18
Some songbirds are not dissuaded by constant, loud noise emitted by natural gas pipeline compressors and will establish nests nearby. The number of eggs they lay is unaffected by the din, but their reproductive success ultimately is diminished.
That's the conclusion of a team of Penn State researchers who conducted an innovative, elaborate study that included unceasing playback of recorded compressor noise, 80 new, never-before-used nest boxes occupied by Eastern bluebirds and tree swallows, and behavioral observations with video cameras placed within boxes.
Importantly, the birds did not preferentially select quiet boxes over noisy boxes, suggesting they do not recognize the reduction ...
2021-02-18
Irvine, Calif. -- An interdisciplinary team of biologists and mathematicians at the University of California, Irvine has developed a new tool to help decipher the language cells use to communicate with one another.
In a paper published today in Nature Communications, the researchers introduce CellChat, a computational platform that enables the decoding of signaling molecules that transmit information and commands between the cells that come together to form biological tissues and even entire organs.
"To properly understand why cells do certain things, and to predict their future actions, we need to be able to listen ...
2021-02-18
Law enforcement and those in the military, rather than doctors and celebrities, are the most preferred messengers on firearm safety, a Rutgers study found.
The findings, published in the journal Preventive Medicine, can help communicate the importance of safe firearm storage and reduce the rate of suicides, Rutgers researchers say.
"We know that safe firearm storage is a key component to suicide prevention, but that belief is not widespread among firearm owners," said lead author Michael Anestis, executive director of the New Jersey Gun Violence Research Center and an associate professor of Urban-Global Public Health at Rutgers School ...
2021-02-18
A research team including the geobiologist Dr. Helge Missbach from the University of Cologne has detected organic molecules and gases trapped in 3.5 billion-year-old rocks. A widely accepted hypothesis says that the earliest life forms used small organic molecules as building materials and energy sources. However, the existence of such components in early habitats on Earth was as yet unproven. The current study, published in the journal 'Nature Communications', now shows that solutions from archaic hydrothermal vents contained essential components that formed a basis for the earliest life on our planet.
Specifically, the scientists examined about ...
2021-02-18
Weighing in at roughly 21 solar masses, the black hole in the X-ray binary system Cygnus X-1 is so massive that it challenges current stellar evolution models, a new study reveals. Ultimately, the mass of a black hole is determined by its parent star's properties and is generally constrained by the mass lost to stellar winds throughout its lifetime. If a black hole interacts with a binary companion star, the system emits X-rays and can sometimes form radio jets, which make the systems visible to electromagnetic observations as an X-ray binary. Measurements from known x-ray binaries have shown that black holes in these systems all have masses below 20 solar masses (M?), with the largest being 15-17 M?. However, gravitational wave detections of black hole merger events have found ...
2021-02-18
Nearly 42,000 years ago, when Earth's magnetic fields reversed, this triggered major environmental changes, extinction events, and long-term changes in human behavior, a new study reports. The findings, made possible by a new radiocarbon record derived from New Zealand's ancient kauri trees, raise important questions about the evolutionary impacts of geomagnetic reversals and excursions throughout the deeper geological record, the authors say. "Before this work," says author Chris Turney in a related video, "we knew there were a lot of things happening around the world at 42,000 years ago, but we didn't know precisely how... For the first time, we've been able to precisely date what happened when Earth's magnetic fields last flipped." Written in the geological ...
2021-02-18
Few of Earth's freshwater areas remain untouched by humans. More than half of the planet's freshwater river basins have been heavily impacted by human activities, according to a new study, which presents a novel, multi-faceted approach for evaluating biodiversity change at a global scale. Although rivers and lakes cover less than 1% of the planet's surface, they support a substantial component of the planet's biodiversity, including a quarter of Earth's vertebrates. Further, freshwater systems support the functioning and stability of a variety of ecosystems, including those that contribute to human wellbeing. Centuries of human activity - overfishing, non-native species introductions, on-river development, ...
2021-02-18
Scientists have used a technique to grow bile duct organoids - often referred to as 'mini-organs' - in the lab and shown that these can be used to repair damaged human livers. This is the first time that the technique has been used on human organs.
The research paves the way for cell therapies to treat liver disease - in other words, growing 'mini-bile ducts' in the lab as replacement parts that can be used to restore a patient's own liver to health - or to repair damaged organ donor livers, so that they can still be used for transplantation.
Bile ducts act as the liver's waste disposal system, and malfunctioning bile ducts are behind a third of adult and 70 per cent of children's liver transplantations, with no ...
2021-02-18
Organoids grown from bile duct epithelial cells can be used to repair damaged bile ducts in transplanted human livers, researchers report. The results provide proof of concept for using ex vivo cell-based therapy to improve organ function before transplantation, which could ultimately increase the number of useable organs on the transplant waiting list. Bile produced in the liver is carried to the small intestine through a network of bile ducts formed by biliary epithelial cells known as cholangiocytes. While crucial for digestion, bile becomes toxic when it accumulates in the liver. As a result, chronic liver diseases that affect cholangiocytes often result in liver failure ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Stents or bypass surgery more effective for stable patients with high-risk cardiac anatomy
Location of blockages in a patient's heart is a key consideration in selecting the right treatment, University of Alberta cardiologists find