(Press-News.org) BURLINGTON—Researchers at the University of Vermont have developed a more precise way to assess stroke risk in people with atrial fibrillation (A-Fib), a condition that affects 10.5 million Americans and is a leading cause of stroke.
Their findings, published August 6 in the Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, show that adding simple blood tests to an existing risk calculator can help physicians better determine who truly needs anticoagulant medications—powerful drugs that prevent strokes but can also cause dangerous bleeding. The researchers posted a new improved stroke risk calculator online for physicians’ easy access.
“This could be a game-changer for stroke prevention,” said principal investigator Mary Cushman, M.D., M.Sc., University Distinguished Professor of Medicine and Pathology & Laboratory Medicine. “We’re giving physicians a sharper tool to provide a personalized approach to anticoagulation for patients who need it most, while sparing others from unnecessary risk.”
Anticoagulant medications can reduce stroke risk for some people with A-Fib, but some people who take anticoagulants experience a breakthrough stroke anyway, and the medications can cause dangerous side effects related to uncontrolled bleeding. To estimate a patient’s stroke risk before prescribing anticoagulants, physicians can use a conventional risk calculator, called the CHA2DS2-VASc score, that considers a patient’s age, sex, and medical history. The CHA2DS2-VASc score has limited capability, and it does not account for other important risk factors, including heart dysfunction, accelerated blood clotting, and inflammation, which can be assessed with blood tests.
The improved CHA2DS2-VASc-Biomarkers risk calculator accounts for those additional risks factors by adding the blood tests to the calculation. It is based on two studies led by researchers at the Vermont Center for Cardiovascular and Brain Health and the Department of Medicine at the university’s Larner College of Medicine. This research was supported by funding from the U.S. National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.
In the first study, the investigators looked at nine blood tests that might predict the occurrence of stroke in 713 people who were taking an anticoagulant to prevent stroke. With a 12-year follow up, 9 percent of these people developed a breakthrough stroke. The investigators found that three blood test results that identify proteins associated with heart dysfunction, accelerated clotting, and inflammation activity were related to the risk of a stroke.
In the second study, the investigators looked at the same 9 blood tests in 2,400 people who were not taking an anticoagulant to prevent stroke. Over 13 years, 7 percent of them developed a stroke. The investigators discovered that two of the blood tests increased the ability of the CHA2DS2-VASc score to predict a stroke. The researchers used these two blood tests to create a more accurate risk scoring system, called CHA2DS2-VASc-Biomarkers score. This improved scoring system can be used by clinicians to decide which patients with atrial fibrillation might benefit the most from anticoagulant medication.
“This will help doctors better select patients for anticoagulation, potentially saving lives and reducing health care costs,” said lead author Samuel Short, M.D. ’23. Now a hematology fellow at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, Short began this research as a medical student at the Larner College of Medicine, working with Cushman as faculty mentor. They used data from the an ongoing national study, Reasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS), a cohort study of 30,239 adults monitored for stroke and related diseases.
Short presented an early abstract of this research at the American Heart Association’s Epidemiology and Prevention/Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic Health 2024 Scientific Sessions.
The new CHA2DS2-VASc-Biomarkers risk calculator will be available at www.uvm.edu/chadsvascb
###
Research like this has contributed to the University of Vermont’s designation by the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education as an R1 institution, placing it in the top tier of research universities in the U.S.
END
New research by the University of South Australia finds a silver lining to the struggling media landscape in the face of the digital age, revealing that social media is enhancing the diversity of news the community receives.
The study found that Australian news is more diverse on social media, as the traditional media landscape – particularly quality local journalism – has become increasingly unsustainable.
Social media is the most popular way for Australians to find and consume news, ...
HOXB13, a B-class homeobox transcription factor, sits at the hub of developmental gene networks yet has emerged as a double-edged sword in human cancer. While indispensable for embryonic patterning and androgen-dependent organogenesis, its expression is frequently hijacked or extinguished by epigenetic, mutational and post-translational events that drive tumour initiation, progression and therapy resistance. Across more than twenty malignancies, the protein acts as either oncogene or tumour suppressor, depending on tissue context, interacting partners and mutational ...
A proposed earthquake early warning system could have provided several communities an alert of 10 seconds or more ahead of strong shaking from the magnitude 7.3 quake that occurred south of Sand Point near the tip of the Alaska Peninsula in mid-July.
That analysis is provided by Alex Fozkos of the Alaska Earthquake Center’s systems team at the University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute.
“Individuals in Sand Point could have expected approximately 10 seconds of warning time before ...
A team of theoretical researchers used thermal effective theory to demonstrate that quantum entanglement follows universal rules across all dimensions. Their study was published online on August 5, in Physical Review Letters as an Editors’ Suggestion.
“This study is the first example of applying thermal effective theory to quantum information. The results of this study demonstrate the usefulness of this approach, and we hope to further develop this approach to gain a deeper understanding of quantum entanglement structures,” ...
Beneath the modern Sichuan Basin lies a geological masterpiece orchestrated by the Emeishan mantle plume 262 million year ago. A landmark study published in the Journal of Palaeogeography (Chinese Edition) uncovers how plume-driven tectonics shattered a Permian carbonate ramp into a complex platform system, creating a 400-kilometer-long dolostone hydrocarbon reservoir belt now pivotal to China’s energy exploration. Led by Prof. Yuan Haifeng (Chengdu University of Technology) and Dr. Zhang Benjian (PetroChina Southwest ...
Scientists have captured unique on-board footage of Indian Ocean seabirds speeding just above the waves to catch flying fish on the wing.
The footage, obtained by lightweight bird-borne cameras formed part of a study of the lives of seabirds in the waters around the remote archipelago they call home.
Two red-footed boobies - a tropical cousin of the more familiar gannet – were carefully fitted with the tiny cameras to record how they catch their favourite food; flying fish. Of 15 capture attempts, 14 were towards flying fish while in flight and one was an underwater dive.
This is the first such on-board footage revealing that flying ...
They twist and turn across the sky in dense, whirling formations—murmurations of birds that seem to move as one, captivating watchers and puzzling scientists for decades. Now, a new analysis suggests that one of the most mysterious features of these aerial displays—the behaviour of birds at the edges—may stem from accident rather than intent.
A study examining the flocking patterns of jackdaws has found that the sharp borders of murmurations, and the way certain birds linger at the edges, can be explained by the mathematical rules that govern how individuals ...
Join us for a cutting-edge Carbon Research Webinar featuring Prof. Weihong Yang from KTH-Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden, where he will explore innovative strategies to transition from fossil-based materials to sustainable, bio-based graphite alternatives. This talk will provide insights into the conversion of bioprecursors into fossil-free graphite and its applications in lithium-ion batteries and electrochemical systems. A techno-economic assessment and life cycle analysis (LCA) will also be discussed.
Date: Monday, August 11, 2025
Time:
‣ 15:00–16:00 (Beijing, China)
‣ 09:00–10:00 (CET, Europe/Swedish Time)
Speaker:
Prof. ...
‘Solastalgia’ might help explain the negative effects of climate change on mental health, suggests a review of the available research, published in the open access journal BMJ Mental Health.
Solastalgia is caused by changes to the home or surrounding environment and is associated with depression, anxiety, and post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the findings show.
A blend of the words ‘solace’ and ‘nostalgia’, the term solastalgia was first coined in 2003 to refer to the lack of solace and feelings of pain or sickness caused by changes ...
Experiencing childhood verbal abuse shows a similar impact to adult mental health as physical abuse, suggests a large intergenerational study, published in the open access journal BMJ Open.
While often not immediately obvious, the effects of verbal abuse may be no less damaging or protracted, the findings indicate. This large retrospective study of more than 20,000 participants examining birth cohorts from the 1950s onwards showed reductions in childhood physical abuse but increases in childhood verbal abuse.
Globally, an estimated 1 in 6 children endures physical abuse from family and caregivers. As well as the immediate physical trauma, physical abuse can exert lifelong ...