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

Higher-dose use of certain statins often best for cholesterol issues

2012-10-15
(Press-News.org) CORVALLIS, Ore. – A comprehensive new review on how to treat high cholesterol and other blood lipid problems suggests that intensive treatment with high doses of statin drugs is usually the best approach.

But some statins work much better for this than others, the review concluded, and additional lipid-lowering medications added to a statin have far less value. And medications, of course, should be considered after first trying diet, weight loss and exercise.

The review, published in the Annals of Pharmacotherapy, examined the range of treatment options for "dyslipidemia," or concerns about LDL cholesterol that is too high; HDL cholesterol that is too low; elevated triglycerides; and other issues that affect millions of people around the world.

It concluded that use of statin drugs, which effectively lower LDL, or "bad" cholesterol, is appropriate for both moderate and high risk patients who have issues with their cholesterol levels, or may already have experienced a heart attack or angina as a result of cardiovascular disease.

But it also found that in most cases simply increasing the statin dose would offer the best protection against serious cardiovascular problems, more so than using other drugs or combinations of drugs.

"Statins are proven medications that can reduce heart attacks and strokes by about 30 percent in the patients that need them," said Matt Ito, a professor of pharmacy practice at Oregon State University, author of the study and president-elect of the National Lipid Association.

"What we looked at here was whether adding other drugs or therapies to the use of statins could further reduce problems, and in most cases the research indicates that they didn't help," Ito said. "What did help was increasing the statin dose to higher levels within the range for which they are approved. And there did not appear to be a significant change in side effects based on any approved dosage."

The goal with what the researchers called "intensive monotherapy," or high doses of just one statin drug, was usually to reduce LDL cholesterol to 100 mg/dL or less – or 70 mg/dL or less for people who already have coronary disease, diabetes or other special risks. Failing that, the medication goal should be to at least cut the LDL level in half, Ito said.

For intensive monotherapy with an average patient, research indicates that only two of the most commonly prescribed statins are suitable: atorvastatin and rosuvastatin. Others that are "not suitable for intensive monotherapy," the review said, include fluvastatin, lovastatin, pitavastatin, pravastatin, and simvastatin.

All statin drugs, at lower dosages, can have value if less dramatic lowering of LDL levels is needed, the researchers said.

"The reaction to statin regimens varies with the individual, so some of these other drugs may also be able to accomplish the goals we're seeking," Ito said. "These recommendations are based on results with an average patient, but physicians may find some of their patients can do adequately well with other statins, or that they don't need intensive monotherapy."

Statin drugs are generally well tolerated but can be associated with some side effects, experts say, particularly myopathy, or muscle pain and damage. These are some of the factors considered in establishing safe and accepted dosages. Some of the available drugs at their highest accepted dosage have been shown to cut LDL levels more than others, Ito said, and are therefore the best candidates for intensive therapy.

Other medications sometimes given for dyslipidemia were shown to have less value or even pose additional risks, the review found. This includes fibrates to lower triglyceride levels; niacin to lower triglycerides and raise HDL levels; and omega-3 fatty acids that appeared safe, but added little in efficacy to what was already being accomplished with statin drugs.

"We found that only in patients with extremely high triglycerides and very low HDL would use of fibrates be appropriate to use in addition to statins," Ito said. "Otherwise the increased risks outweigh the benefits, especially in women."

###More detail on some of these issues, Ito said, can be found online at the web site of the National Lipid Association, lipid.org. A link for consumers called "Learn your Lipids" would be especially helpful, he said.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Climate negotiations relying on 'dangerous' thresholds to avoid catastrophe will not succeed

2012-10-15
The identified critical threshold for dangerous climate change saying that the increase in global temperature should be below 2 degrees Celsius seems not to have helped the climate negotiations so far. New research from the University of Gothenburg and Columbia University shows that negotiations based on such a threshold fail because its value is determined by Nature and is inherently uncertain. Climate negotiators should therefore focus on other collective strategies. Presenting their results in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), Astrid Dannenberg, ...

No fear: Why teens are likelier to take gambles

2012-10-15
A new study by Yale School of Medicine researchers and their colleagues finds that adolescents commonly take more risks than younger children and adults because they are more willing to accept risks when consequences are unknown, rather than because they are attracted to danger, as often assumed. Adolescents have the highest rates of sexually transmitted diseases and criminal behaviors of any age group, and even drive faster than adults. The death and injury rate of adolescents is 200% greater than for their younger peers, according to research cited in the study. Ifat ...

What you hear could depend on what your hands are doing

2012-10-15
NEW ORLEANS, La. —New research links motor skills and perception, specifically as it relates to a second finding—a new understanding of what the left and right brain hemispheres "hear." Georgetown University Medical Center researchers say these findings may eventually point to strategies to help stroke patients recover their language abilities, and to improve speech recognition in children with dyslexia. The study, presented at Neuroscience 2012, the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, is the first to match human behavior with left brain/right brain auditory ...

Sitting for protracted periods increases risk of diabetes, heart disease and death – study

2012-10-15
A new study led by the University of Leicester, in association with colleagues at Loughborough University, has discovered that sitting for long periods increases your risk of diabetes, heart disease and death. The study, which combined the results of 18 studies and included a total of 794,577 participants, was led by Dr. Emma Wilmot, a research fellow in the Diabetes Research Group at the University of Leicester. It was done in collaboration with colleagues from the newly established National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Leicester-Loughborough Diet, Lifestyle ...

Early-Earth cells modeled to show how first life forms might have packaged RNA

Early-Earth cells modeled to show how first life forms might have packaged RNA
2012-10-15
Researchers at Penn State University have developed a chemical model that mimics a possible step in the formation of cellular life on Earth four-billion years ago. Using large "macromolecules" called polymers, the scientists created primitive cell-like structures that they infused with RNA -- the genetic coding material that is thought to precede the appearance of DNA on Earth -- and demonstrated how the molecules would react chemically under conditions that might have been present on the early Earth. The journal Nature Chemistry will post the research as an Advance Online ...

Rare cells regulate immune responses; May offer novel treatment for autoimmune diseases

2012-10-15
DURHAM, NC -- Reproducing a rare type of B cell in the laboratory and infusing it back into the body may provide an effective treatment for severe autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis or rheumatoid arthritis, according to researchers at Duke University Medical Center. The findings, which were demonstrated in mice, highlight the unique properties of a subset of B cells that normally controls immune responses and limits autoimmunity, in which an organism mistakenly attacks its own healthy tissue. The work appears Oct. 14, 2012, in the journal Nature. B cells ...

Research shows legume trees can fertilize and stabilize maize fields, generate higher yields

2012-10-15
Michelle Geis mgeis@burnesscommunications.com 301-280-5712 Burness Communications Wambui Kamiru w.kamiru@cgiar.org 254-724-623-016 CGIAR Research shows legume trees can fertilize and stabilize maize fields, generate higher yields Africa's first long-term study finds legume trees planted alongside maize, combined with less fertilizer, is best solution for Africa's most important food crop NAIROBI, KENYA (15 October 2012)—Inserting rows of "fertilizer trees" into maize fields, known as agroforestry, can help farmers across sub-Saharan Africa cope with ...

Report reveals key concerns of UK's aging society

2012-10-15
One in six people in England aged over 50 are socially isolated. They have few socially orientated hobbies, little civic or cultural engagement with society, and may have very limited social networks. This was a key finding from the most recent report of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA), a comprehensive study that aims to understand the economic, social, psychological and health concerns of an ageing society. The multidisciplinary ELSA research team showed that the least wealthy over-fifties suffer the most social isolation, with the wealthier over 50's half ...

Adding up autism risks

2012-10-15
The causes of autism and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are complex, and contain elements of both nature (genes) and the environment. New research published in BioMed Central's open access journal Molecular Autism shows that common genetic polymorphisms (genetic variation) can add up to an increased risk of ASD. The contribution of inheritance and genetic mutation versus environmental factors to the risk of ASD is hotly debated. Most twin studies show the contribution heavily tilted toward inheritance, but the exact amount of involvement of genes in ASD risk is less apparent. ...

Making a layer cake with atomic precision

2012-10-15
In a report published in Nature Physics, a group led Dr Leonid Ponomarenko and Nobel prize-winner Professor Andre Geim has assembled individual atomic layers on top of each other in a desired sequence. The team used individual one-atom-thick crystals to construct a multilayer cake that works as a nanoscale electric transformer. Graphene, isolated for the first time at The University of Manchester in 2004, has the potential to revolutionise diverse applications from smartphones and ultrafast broadband to drug delivery and computer chips. It has the potential to replace ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

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

Discovery of bats remarkable navigation strategy revealed in new study

Urban tributaries identified as major sources of plastic chemical pollution in the Yangtze River

UK glaucoma cases higher than expected and projected to reach 1.6 million+ by 2060

Type 2 diabetes prevention could more than halve carbon footprint linked to disease complications

Over 1 million estimated to have glaucoma in UK

Early treatment can delay rheumatoid arthritis for years

National childhood type 1 diabetes screening is effective and could prevent thousands of emergency diagnoses, UK study shows

Mix of different types of physical activity may be best for longer life

Continuous care from community-based midwives reduces risk of preterm birth by 45%

Otago experts propose fiber as first new essential nutrient in 50 years

Auburn Physics PhD student earns prestigious DOE Fellowship

AI tool helps you learn how autistic communication works

To show LGBTQ+ support, look beyond Pride Month

Using artificial intelligence to understand how emotions are formed

Exposure to wildfire smoke late in pregnancy may raise autism risk in children

Breaking barriers in lymphatic imaging: Rice’s SynthX Center leads up to $18 million effort for ‘unprecedented resolution and safety’

Dhaval Jadav joins the SETI Institute Board to help spearhead novel science and technology approaches in the search for extraterrestrial life

Political writing retains an important and complex role in the national conversation, new book shows

Weill Cornell Medicine receives funding to develop diagnostic toolbox for lymphatic disease

It started with a cat: How 100 years of quantum weirdness powers today’s tech

McGill researchers identify a range of unexpected chemical contaminants in human milk

Physical therapy research highlights arthritis’ toll on the workforce — and the path forward

Biomedical and life science articles by female researchers spend longer under review

Forgetting in infants can be prevented in mice by blocking their brain’s immune cells

Blocking immune cells in the brain can prevent infant forgetting

[Press-News.org] Higher-dose use of certain statins often best for cholesterol issues