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

South Asian patients require 3 times as much repeat angioplasty as white Europeans

2011-11-22
(Press-News.org) South Asian patients with coronary artery disease were almost three times as likely to be readmitted to hospital for further interventional treatment to arterial plaque than their White European counterparts, according to research in the December issue of IJCP, the International Journal of Clinical Practice. They were also more likely to present as an emergency and require urgent treatment.

Researchers carried out a five-year follow-up study of 1,158 patients who had received percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) at a UK hospital, comparing 293 South Asians and 865 White Europeans. PCI, which is often known as angioplasty, is carried out to remove the cholesterol-laden plaque that has built up in the arteries leading to the heart, making them narrower and reducing blood flow.

"When we compared the number of further procedures the patients underwent, we found that the South Asian patients were three times as likely to need further procedures than their White European counterparts" says lead author Dr Chetan Varma, from the Department of Cardiology at City Hospital, Birmingham, UK. "Despite this, there were no long-term differences in the all-cause death rates between the two ethnic groups."

The researchers studied consecutive patients who had received PCIs at the hospital between April 2002 and December 2004, following them for between 47 and 65 months. High-risk cases were excluded to remove confounding effects. The majority of the patients were men (72%) and the South Asian patients were of Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi and Sri Lankan origin.

Key findings of the study included:

South Asian patients tended to be younger than White European patients (62 versus 66 years), more then twice as likely to have diabetes (40% v 16%), but less likely to be smokers (16% v 39%).

The extent of the coronary artery disease and the location of the index coronary vessel lesion when the first PCI procedure was carried out was similar in both ethnic groups.

A total of 111 patients required repeat revascularisation. Of these, 94 had a repeat PCI and 17 underwent coronary artery bypass grafting. South Asian patients were almost three times as likely to be readmitted for PCI (15.7% v 5.5%) or coronary artery bypass grafting (2.7% v 1.0%).

Following the initial procedure, South Asian patients also required more PCI for treatment of non-index lesions (24.2% v 8.9%). After controlling for baseline clinical and procedural characteristics, South Asian ethnicity was a significant independent predictor of target lesion revascularisation, with levels approximately three times higher (18.4% v 6.6%).

The patients were followed up for a median of 54 months. During this period 12% of the patients died, but there was no statistically significant difference in the two groups when it came to all-cause death.

Social deprivation was three times higher among South Asian patients (10.2 v 3.3 points) as measured by the Carstairs index, which is based on key census indicators. The hospital's catchment area includes areas with unemployment rates of twice the national average and the second lowest average earnings in England and Wales.

Each one point increase in the Carstairs social deprivation score was matched by a 5% increase in the risk of long-term, all-cause death.

Further analysis (Cox regression) showed that age, history of heart attacks, social deprivation score and creatinine levels before treatment were independent predictors of long-term, all-cause death in the whole study group.

"South Asians develop symptomatic coronary artery disease at an earlier age and also have a higher prevalence than White Europeans" concludes Dr Varma. "PCI can be used for symptomatic relief in stable angina and to improve prognosis in acute coronary syndrome.

"Despite needing more urgent hospital treatment and experiencing worse social deprivation, South Asian patients have a long-term death rate similar to White Europeans. However, they are three times as likely to require repeat treatment following PCI, due to further narrowing of the arteries leading to the heart."

###

Notes to editors

Differences between South Asians and White Europeans in five year outcome following percutaneous coronary intervention. Toor et al. International Journal of Clinical Practice. 65.12 pp1259-1266. (December 2011). doi: 10.1111/j.1742-1241.2011.02776.x

IJCP, the International Journal of Clinical Practice was established in 1946 and is edited by Dr Graham Jackson. It provides its global audience of clinicians with high-calibre clinical papers, including original data from clinical investigations, evidence-based analysis and discussions on the latest clinical topics. http://wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/IJCP www.twitter.com/IJCPeditors

Wiley-Blackwell is the international scientific, technical, medical, and scholarly publishing business of John Wiley & Sons, with strengths in every major academic and professional field and partnerships with many of the world's leading societies. Wiley-Blackwell publishes nearly 1,500 peer-reviewed journals and 1,500+ new books annually in print and online, as well as databases, major reference works and laboratory protocols. For more information, please visit www.wileyblackwell.com or our new online platform, Wiley Online Library (wileyonlinelibrary.com), one of the world's most extensive multidisciplinary collections of online resources, covering life, health, social and physical sciences, and humanities.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

System to reuse with health guarantees, sludge from wastewater

2011-11-22
The water treatment consists of removing the pollution of the same water for the same or better quality. In this process, which takes place in wastewater treatment plants, a sludge is originated which are governed by specific legislation. They are also purified and can be reused in the field as mulch or for composting. Its use is regulated by the EU through an increasingly restrictive Directive. Faced with a possible tightening, the industry looks for viable alternatives to current uses, which enable them to sell this by-product. The sludge from the wastewater treatment ...

MCEM International OSCE Course Attracts Participants From Around The World

2011-11-22
The MCEM International OSCE Course of Winter 2011 took place on Friday 18th November 2011 in the Clinical Skills Centre at Leicester Royal Infirmary. The MCEM International OSCE Course is an examination preparation course for non-UK Emergency Physicians who are sitting the examination for the Membership of the College of Emergency Medicine (MCEM). Emergency Medicine is the medical specialty in which doctors care for patients with acute illnesses or injuries which require immediate medical attention. In the United Kingdom, the postgraduate training in Emergency Medicine ...

A computer system allows a machine to recognize a person's emotional state

A computer system allows a machine to recognize a persons emotional state
2011-11-22
The system created by these researchers can be used to automatically adapt the dialogue to the user's situation, so that the machine's response is adequate to the person's emotional state. "Thanks to this new development, the machine will be able to determine how the user feels (emotions) and how s/he intends to continue the dialogue (intentions)", explains one of its creators, David Grill, a professor in UC3M's Computer Science Department. To detect the user's emotional state, the scientists focused on negative emotions that can make talking with an automatic system ...

Tallmadge Ohio Dentist Welcomes New Associate

2011-11-22
Gerald Sisko D.D.S., Inc. has been serving the families and surrounding communities of Tallmadge since 1992. Dr. Sisko recently welcomed a new associate, Dr. Joseph Landry, to his highly competent and friendly dental team to help expand an already flourishing practice. Dr. Sisko's Akron area dentist office continues to offer a variety of procedures to his patients, including: • Cosmetic • Crown and Bridges Procedures • Dentures & Partial Dentures • Extractions • Implant Restorations • Porcelain Veneers • Preventative Care • Root Canal Therapy • Teeth Whitening • Tooth ...

Ingredients involved in splashing revealed

2011-11-22
"Splashing" plays a central role in the transport of pollutants and the spread of diseases, but while the sight of a droplet striking and splashing off of a solid surface is a common experience, the actual physical ingredients and mechanisms involved in splashing aren't all that well understood. A team of Brown University and Harvard University researchers has discovered that there is indeed more involved in splashing than previously believed. They will discuss their findings at the upcoming American Physical Society's 64th Annual Division of Fluid Dynamics Meeting, which ...

Le Dimora and Jimmy Choo Host Holiday Event to Benefit Jammer Family Foundation

2011-11-22
A holiday Open House hosted by Le Dimora and Jimmy Choo will be held at the Le Dimora interior design boutique located at 16089 San Dieguito Road in Rancho Santa Fe (Del Rayo Village Shopping Center) on the evening of Thursday, December 1, 2011 from 6:00 pm to 8:30 pm to launch the Jimmy Choo Cruise 2012 Collection and raise funds for the Jammer Family Foundation. Guests will savor appetizers provided by Sushi on the Rock and sip champagne while shopping for shoes, handbags and interior decor items in a festive holiday atmosphere. A percentage of all sales from the event ...

Regeneration after a stroke requires intact communication channels between brain hemispheres

Regeneration after a stroke requires intact communication channels between brain hemispheres
2011-11-22
The structure of the corpus callosum, a thick band of nerve fibres that connects the two halves of the brain with each other and in this way enables the rapid exchange of information between the left and right hemispheres, plays an important role in the regaining of motor skills following a stroke. A study currently published in the journal Human Brain Mapping has shown that in stroke patients with particularly severely impaired hand movement, this communication channel between the two brain hemispheres in particular was badly damaged. In order to relate brain function ...

Rainfall suspected culprit in leaf disease transmission

2011-11-22
Rainfalls are suspected to trigger the spread of a multitude of foliar (leaf) diseases, which could be devastating for agriculture and forestry. Instead of focusing on the large-scale, ecological impact of this problem, researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge and the University of Liege in Belgium are studying the phenomenon from a novel perspective: that of a single rain droplet. "One may easily picture that a raindrop impacting a contaminated leaf grabs some of the pathogens there before being ejected and flying towards some healthy ...

Engineers devise shoe sampling system for detecting trace amounts of explosives

2011-11-22
The ability to efficiently and unobtrusively screen for trace amounts of explosives on airline passengers could improve travel safety – without invoking the ire of inconvenienced fliers. Toward that end, mechanical engineer and fluid dynamicist Matthew Staymates of the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Gaithersburg, Maryland, and colleagues have developed a prototype air sampling system that can quickly blow particles off the surfaces of shoes and suck them away for analysis. The NIST engineers developed several different versions of the system. "One particular ...

Broward SCORE Creates 2012 Workshop Calendar to Fit Smart Phones and Tablets

2011-11-22
Broward SCORE will launch in December special digital editions of its upcoming winter workshops for 2012 designed for smart phones and tablets. SCORE enlisted the expertise of Guni Bermudez of Reach MCS and Jeff Miller of Stallion Publishers, both based in Fort Lauderdale, to create the new platforms. The Broward chapter of SCORE, a resource partner with the SBA, tested its digital editions in the fall, working out the kinks and improving the user experience. These new digital editions allow the nonprofit's workshop catalog to be easily viewed on smart phones, and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Dopamine signaling in fruit flies lends new insight into human motivation

American Gastroenterological Association streamlines Crohn’s disease treatment guidance as new therapies expand options

New ‘sensor’ lets researchers watch DNA repair in real time

Customized cells to fight brain cancer

How superstorm Gannon squeezed Earth’s plasmasphere to one-fifth its size

Gene scissors in camouflage mode help in the search for cancer therapies

Breaking the cycle of vulnerability: study identifies modifiable elements to build community resilience and improve health

Millions of people in the UK are being drawn into bribery and money laundering, according to new study

Could a child have painted that? Jackson Pollock's famous pour-painting has child-like characteristics, study shows

Broad support for lethal control of wild deer among nature organisation subscribers

Over a decade in the making: Illuminating new possibilities with lanthanide nanocrystals

Deadly, record-breaking heatwaves will persist for 1,000 years, even under net zero

Maps created by 1960s schoolchildren provide new insights into habitat losses

Cool comfort: beating the heat with high-tech clothes

New study reveals how China can cut nitrogen pollution while safeguarding national food security

Two thirds of women experience too much or too little weight gain in pregnancy

Thousands of NHS doctors trapped in insecure “gig economy” contracts

Two thirds of women gain too much or too little weight in pregnancy: Global study

Livestock manure linked to the rapid spread of hidden antibiotic resistance threats in farmland soils

National Women’s Soccer League launches Hands-Only CPR effort, led by player Savy King

School accountability yields long-term gains for students

Half of novelists believe AI is likely to replace their work entirely, research finds

World's largest metabolomic study completed, paving way for predictive medicine

Center for Open Science awarded grant from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to preserve and safeguard publicly funded scientific data

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers identify genetic factors influencing bone density in pediatric patients

Trapping particles to explain lightning

Teens who play video games with gambling-like elements more likely to start real betting, study suggests

Maternal health program cuts infection deaths by 32%

Use of head CT scans in ERs more than doubles over 15 years

Open spaces in cities may be hotspots for coyote-human interaction

[Press-News.org] South Asian patients require 3 times as much repeat angioplasty as white Europeans