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

Patients with peripheral arterial disease who also have atrial fibrillation face significantly higher risk for cardiac events including death

2025-11-10
(Press-News.org) New research from Intermountain Health in Salt Lake City finds that patients diagnosed with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) who also have atrial fibrillation (AFib) face a significantly higher risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE).

The Intermountain study analyzed long-term data of Intermountain Health patients with PAD and found that AFib was present in approximately one in four PAD patients, making this combination far more common than previously recognized.

More importantly, Intermountain researchers found the presence of AFib nearly doubles the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events in patients compared to PAD alone.

Irregular heart rhythms are called arrhythmias. AFib is the most common arrhythmia that often, can become rapid. This can result in symptoms like palpitations, fatigue, and shortness of breath as the heart’s upper chambers, called atria beat out of sync with the lower “pumping” chambers, called ventricles.

AFib can lead to blood clots in the heart, increasing the risk of stroke. The condition also increases the risk of heart failure, and other heart-related complications. Many people don't notice symptoms.

PAD, like coronary artery disease, develops from a buildup of deposits in the arteries, but occurs in the extremities. PAD is estimated to affect nearly 8-12 million US adults.

In PAD, the legs or arms – usually the legs – don't get enough blood flow to keep up with demand. This may cause leg pain when walking, called claudication, and other symptoms.

While treatments for CAD and PAD are similar, including exercising, eating healthy foods, and not smoking or using tobacco, unlike CAD, individuals with PAD have higher risk of heart attacks, strokes, and amputations.

Researchers say the presence of AFib further amplifies risks of events. 

“This is a stark reminder that PAD is not just a limb-threatening disease – it’s a marker of widespread atherosclerosis,” said Viet Le, DMSc, MPAS, PA-C, an advanced practice clinician and cardiovascular researcher at Intermountain Health and principal investigator of the study. “We found that when atrial fibrillation is added to the mix, the risk of heart attack, stroke, and death escalates significantly. Clinicians must screen for AFib in PAD patients and aggressively manage both conditions.”

Key Findings of the study:

• PAD patients without AFib already face a high event rate: 12% experience a major cardiovascular event within the first year, and 25% within three years.

• When AFib is present, MACE occurrences rise dramatically: 25% in the first year and 46% within three years.

• Major adverse cardiovascular events include myocardial infarction (heart attack), stroke, hospitalization for heart failure, unstable angina, or death due to cardiovascular events.

Researchers say the findings underscore the need for better adherence to screening and treatment protocols. Despite existing guidelines, only 35% of PAD patients receive optimal medical therapy, including blood pressure control, statins, aspirin, and smoking cessation support.

"Both conditions derive from plaque build-up in femoral and arterial arteries," said Le. "Atrial fibrillation should be assessed in all peripheral arterial disease patients, and aggressive preventative treatment should be implemented."

                                                                       ###

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Factoring in frailty and age to improve pancreatic cancer treatment

2025-11-10
While some risk factors for cancer can be mitigated through lifestyle choices such as diet or exercise, aging is not one of them. In the case of pancreatic cancer, it also can limit treatment options if a patient is too frail to be safely treated with surgery or other alternatives. Scientists at the NCI-Designated Cancer Center at Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute would like to expand options for these patients with personalized treatments. Many stand to benefit from a therapeutic strategy that factors in age. The average age of a patient diagnosed with pancreatic cancer is 70, and nearly two-thirds of cases are in people over the age of ...

Preclinical support for using psychedelics to treat alcohol use disorders

2025-11-10
A psychedelic found in mushrooms is emerging as a potential treatment for alcohol use disorders. This possibility is due to a compound the body converts the psychedelic into called psilocin, but psilocin’s mechanisms remain unclear. Researchers, led by Sarah Magee and Melissa Herman at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, explored whether psilocin targets neurons in the central amygdala involved in emotional processing and stress to alter alcohol use in their JNeurosci paper. Herman emphasizes that ...

Exploring how the maternal bond affects social processing in babies

2025-11-10
In a new JNeurosci paper, Sarah Jessen and colleagues, from the University of Lübeck, explored how infants track their mothers’ voices compared to unfamiliar voices. The researchers also explored whether this vocal processing affects how babies process new faces.  Brain recordings of babies around 7 months old showed that they were far more attuned to the voices of their mothers than strangers. Additionally, neural tracking of unfamiliar faces was stronger when babies heard a stranger’s voice compared to their mother’s voice at the same time. Whether a face ...

How do people learn new movement patterns and alternate between them?

2025-11-10
In a new JNeurosci paper, Kahori Kita and colleagues at Johns Hopkins University explored how people switch between intuitive motor skills they know and newly learned movement patterns.  Study volunteers frequently made errors switching between more innate movements and new ones. These errors were largely because people persistently stuck to the movement patterns they used before the switch. Notes Kita, “People made similar errors when switching from the intuitive to the new skill, as when switching from the new skill to the intuitive one.” A second group of people learned two new movement-based skills. It was initially even more difficult for these ...

Devilishly distinctive new bee species discovered in WA Goldfields

2025-11-10
A new native bee species with tiny devil-like “horns” named Megachile (Hackeriapis) lucifer has been discovered in Western Australia’s Goldfields, highlighting how much remains unknown about Australia’s native pollinators. The striking new bee was found during surveys of a critically endangered wildflower Marianthus aquilonarius that grows only in the Bremer Range region, which is between the towns of Norseman and Hyden. Lead author Curtin Adjunct Research Fellow Dr Kit Prendergast, from the Curtin School of Molecular and Life Sciences, said the female bee’s unusual ...

Updated labeling for menopausal hormone therapy

2025-11-10
About The Article: This Viewpoint describes the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s intended label updates and removal of black box warnings for menopausal hormone therapy based on current evidence. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Martin A. Makary, MD, MPH, email commissionersoffice@fda.hhs.gov. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jama.2025.22259) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional ...

Collaborative research team to uncover how plants “remember” and adapt to heat stress

2025-11-10
ST. LOUIS, MO, November 10, 2025 - A new collaborative research team of plant scientists led by Ru Zhang, PhD, associate member, Danforth Plant Science Center has been awarded new funding from the National Science Foundation to investigate how photosynthetic cells retain “heat stress memory” (HSM), a key adaptive mechanism that could help future crops withstand intense and frequent heat waves.  Photosynthesis, the process by which plants convert sunlight into energy, is the key driver of plant growth ...

Research alert: AI model powers skin cancer detection across diverse populations

2025-11-10
Researchers at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine have developed a new approach for identifying individuals with skin cancer that combines genetic ancestry, lifestyle and social determinants of health using a machine learning model. Their model, more accurate than existing approaches, also helped the researchers better characterize disparities in skin cancer risk and outcomes. Skin cancer is among the most common cancers in the United States, with more than 9,500 new cases diagnosed every day and approximately ...

Long-term poverty and rising unsecured debt in early adulthood each linked to higher risk of premature death

2025-11-10
November 10, 2025— Adults who experience poverty-level family income—whether sustained or intermittent—over two decades spanning young to mid-adulthood face a significantly higher risk of dying prematurely than those who are never in poverty, according to new research led by Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. A companion study by the same research team finds that rising unsecured debt—such as credit card debt not tied to an asset—may be one mechanism linking early-life financial hardship to ...

A novel climate biostress model and sentinel system seeks to track global climate impacts

2025-11-10
NEW YORK, NY, November 10, 2025 – An interdisciplinary team of scientists at the Advanced Science Research Center at the CUNY Graduate Center (CUNY ASRC) has unveiled a groundbreaking conceptual model and integrative monitoring framework designed to reveal how climate change is stressing life across the planet. Their study, published this week in Cell Reports Sustainability, introduces the concept of the Climate BioStress model and proposes the adoption of an integrative Climate BioStress Sentinel System (CBS3), which could transform how researchers, policymakers, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

One month of clot prevention after a stent was as effective as year-long course for AFib

Ablation reduces stroke risk for AFib and may remove need for some types of blood thinners

Earlier blood transfusion may reduce heart failure, arrhythmia in adults with heart disease

Texas Tech professors awarded $12 million for data center and AI research

Diabetes drug reduced irregular heartbeat events in overweight/obese adults with AFib

Houston-based medical technology company wins overall global health tech competition at Scientific Sessions 2025

Cup of coffee a day may not be harmful for some adults with AFib and could lower episodes

Heart attack risk halved in adults with heart disease taking tailored vitamin D doses

Phages with fully-synthetic DNA can be edited gene by gene

Investigational daily pill lowered bad cholesterol as much as injectables

Researcher seeks to understand delays in language development

Medication still better than procedure for some irregular heartbeat conditions

Understanding how bacteria use “sunscreen” to adapt to climate

Inaugural Margot and Tom Pritzker Prize for AI in Science Research Excellence announces winners at conference

COP webpages emit seven times more carbon than average sites

Successful visualization of the odor discrimination process in an AI-assisted olfactory sensor

Patients with peripheral arterial disease who also have atrial fibrillation face significantly higher risk for cardiac events including death

Factoring in frailty and age to improve pancreatic cancer treatment

Preclinical support for using psychedelics to treat alcohol use disorders

Exploring how the maternal bond affects social processing in babies

How do people learn new movement patterns and alternate between them?

Devilishly distinctive new bee species discovered in WA Goldfields

Updated labeling for menopausal hormone therapy

Collaborative research team to uncover how plants “remember” and adapt to heat stress

Research alert: AI model powers skin cancer detection across diverse populations

Long-term poverty and rising unsecured debt in early adulthood each linked to higher risk of premature death

A novel climate biostress model and sentinel system seeks to track global climate impacts

Zero-cost, AI-driven digital detection identifies Alzheimer’s and related dementias without additional clinician time

Suicide prevention program decreases risks, saves lives among people recently released from jail

Evolution of firearm mortality as the leading cause of death in the US pediatric population

[Press-News.org] Patients with peripheral arterial disease who also have atrial fibrillation face significantly higher risk for cardiac events including death