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HHAL MEDICAL NEWS APRIL 2012

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HHAL MEDICAL NEWS APRIL 2011

 

Diet and MRI-Confirmed Infarcts in Elders

Among people aged 65 or older, compliance with a Mediterranean diet significantly reduced the prevalence of brain infarcts.

 Scarmeas N et al. Ann Neurol 2011 Feb 69:257

 

Alcohol Lowers Risk for CHD and Mortality

Coronary heart disease and 11-year all-cause mortality were lower with 1 or 2 drinks daily.

Ronksley PE et al. BMJ 2011 Feb 22; 342:d671

 

Diabetes Mellitus, Fasting Glucose, and Risk of Cause-Specific Death

The Emerging Risk Factors Collaboration

 

CONCLUSIONS

In addition to vascular disease, diabetes is associated with substantial premature death from several cancers, infectious diseases, external causes, intentional self-harm, and degenerative disorders, independent of several major risk factors.

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1008862?query=TOC

 

Long Work Hours Add to Coronary Disease Risk

In estimating patients' risk for coronary heart disease, factoring in the length of their workday adds modestly, but significantly, to the sensitivity of their Framingham score, according to anAnnals of Internal Medicine report.

Using a cohort of some 7000 British civil servants without apparent coronary disease at baseline, researchers gathered information to ascertain Framingham risk scores as well as the number of hours worked in a typical day. Follow-up lasted a median of 12 years. After adjustment for Framingham scores, participants working 11 or more hours per day had a 67% increased risk for coronary disease, compared with those working the normal 7 or 8 hours.

The authors caution that "further testing is needed to confirm the added value of information on long working hours for clinical decision making."

Annals of Internal Medicine article 

 

HDL and Colorectal Cancer Risk

HDL levels were inversely associated with colon cancer risk but showed no association with rectal cancer risk.

van Duijnhoven FJB et al. Gut 2011 Mar 7;

 

Long-Term Statin Therapy Does Not Lower Risk for Atrial Fibrillation

Several factors might explain discrepant results between short-term and long-term trials.

Rahimi K et al. BMJ 2011 Mar 16; 342:d1250

 

Value of GFR and Albuminuria in Predicting Cardiovascular Outcomes 

Glomerular filtration rate and albuminuria did not add value to traditional risk factors.

Multiple studies have shown that albuminuria and low estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) predict development of adverse cardiovascular outcomes. Using data from two large studies — ONTARGET (JW Gen Med Sep 2 2008) and TRANSCEND (JW Cardiol Sep 17 2008) — involving more than 27,000 patients (age, >55) who had vascular disease ordiabetes with symptoms of end-organ involvement, researchers evaluated whether eGFR and albuminuria added predictive power beyond that of traditional risk factors.

Mean follow-up was 4.6 years. Low eGFR and elevated urine albumin–creatinine ratios were associated with excess risk for cardiovascular-related death, myocardial infarction, stroke, or hospitalization for heart failure. However, after controlling for traditionalcardiovascular risk factors (i.e., age, sex, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, smoking status, blood glucose and LDL cholesterol levels), addition of eGFR or urine albumin–creatinine ratio failed to improve classification of individuals who did or did not experience adverse cardiovascular outcomes during follow-up.

Medline abstract

Clase CM et al. Ann Intern Med 2011 Mar 1; 154:310

 

PSA Velocity: A Criterion for Prostate Biopsy?

Adding prostate-specific antigen velocity as a trigger for biopsy did not improve predictive accuracy beyond that of using PSA values alone.

Vickers AJ et al. J Natl Cancer Inst 2011 Mar 16; 103:462

Yao SL and Lu-Yao GL. J Natl Cancer Inst 2011 Mar 16; 103:450

 

 

ACC/AHA Offer Expert Consensus on Treating Hypertension in the Elderly

There is little evidence on which to base guidelines for treating hypertension in the elderly, so instead, the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association (and related societies) offer an "expert consensus" in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

The consensus, in brief, is that the diagnosis of hypertension be based on at least three measurements of blood pressure, taken on at least two separate office visits. The clinician's task is to identify reversible or treatable causes, determine if there is organ damage, evaluate other cardiovascular risk factors, and identify barriers to treatment adherence. The treatment goal is <140/90 mm Hg.

Treatment may consist simply of lifestyle modification. When drug therapy is warranted, it should usually begin with a diuretic. When blood pressure is >20/10 mm Hg above the goal, 

JACC article (Free PDF)

Omega-3s Associated with Some Prostate Cancers

Patients may ask about a study that unexpectedly links anti-inflammatory omega-3 fatty acids with high-grade prostate cancer. Proinflammatory trans-fatty acids showed — also unexpectedly — a protective effect. The results appear in the American Journal of Epidemiology.

In a nested, case-control study within the Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial, researchers examined the proportions of serum fatty acids in 1800 men with invasive prostate cancer and1800 matched controls. At the outset of the 7-year study, all participants had been cancer-free.

For the omega-3 fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid, each quartile of serum concentration above the lowest quartile "was associated with an approximate doubling of high-grade disease." For the 18:1 and 18:2 trans-fatty acids, a protective effect was found.

Calling their findings "disconcerting," the authors say that much more study will be needed before changing dietary recommendations.

American Journal of Epidemiology article

 

Exercise, no diet and lipoproteins. Go beyond the plasma levels.
This investigation adds relevant information about the dissociation between quantitative and qualitative aspects of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol after short-term exercise training without any specific diet in the metabolic syndrome. The findings highlight the importance of evaluating the functional aspects of the lipoproteins besides their plasma levels. The American Journal of Cardiology

Treating obesity. What family physicians can do.
The combination of phentermine and topiramate(topamax), with office-based lifestyle interventions, might be a valuable treatment for obesity that can be provided by family doctors. The Lancet

 

Obesity and Overweight Are Associated with Diastolic Dysfunction

This finding held even when other risk factors were taken into account.

Russo C et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2011 Mar 22; 57:1368

 

Adolescent BMI Associated with Heart Disease in Adulthood

Elevated BMI in adolescence and in adulthood are independent risk factors for coronary heart disease.

Tirosh A et al. N Engl J Med 2011 Apr 7; 364:1315

 

Measures of Adiposity Add Little to Standard Predictors of Cardiovascular Risk

Waist-to-hip ratio and body-mass index were equally predictive.

The Emerging Risk Factors Collaboration. Lancet 2011 Mar 26; 377:1085

 

Coronary-Artery Bypass Surgery in Patients with Left Ventricular Dysfunction 

CONCLUSIONS

In this randomized trial, there was no significant difference between medical therapy alone and medical therapy plus CABG with respect to the primary end point of death from any cause. Patients assigned to CABG, as compared with those assigned to medical therapy alone, had lower rates of death from cardiovascular causes and of death from any cause or hospitalization for cardiovascular causes. 

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1100356?query=TOC&

 

 

 

 

Levothyroxine Dosing Associated with Increased Fracture Risk in the Elderly

Elderly patients receiving levothyroxine show a dose-related increased risk for fracture, according to a BMJ study. An accompanying editorial says that the risk is small and the main concern is defining the proper "normal" thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) level in this age group.

Using Ontario's prescription-benefit database, researchers conducted a case-control study among more than 200,000 adults (mean age, 82) who were using thyroxine any time over a 5-year period. Current and recent thyroxine use (within the past 6 months) were both associated with an increased risk for fracture, compared with remote use (discontinued more than 6 months previously). Both high and medium cumulative doses showed increased fracture risk over low doses.

Editorialists criticize the lack of TSH data — a limitation the authors acknowledge — and point out that "elderly people need relatively low thyroxine doses, so serum TSH should be regularly monitored and a suppressed TSH should be avoided in such patients."

BMJ article 

 

Angiotensin II receptor blockers. What else do they do?
This study concludes that long-term use of angiotensin II receptor blockers is associated with a lower incidence of cancer occurrence, thereby suggesting that angiotensin II receptor blockers may prevent cancer development. The American Journal of Cardiology 

 

Vitamin D Deficiency and Anemia in Older Men and Women

VDD was associated with specific subtypes of anemia, particularly anemia of inflammation.

Perlstein TS et al. Blood 2011 Mar 10; 117:2800

 

 

 

Vitamin D insufficiency: Treat everyone
Given that vitamin D insufficiency exists in most people living in mid- or high-latitude countries, and that vitamin D could exert multiple major preventive actions, the authors recommend that vitamin D supplementation should be organized in these countries to treat all those currently in a state of insufficiency, patients and 'normal' subjects alike, without further delay. (Abstract and article in English; abstract in French) Masson/La Presse Medicale 

 

Some benefits continue after estrogen-only therapy withdrawal
Data from the Women's Health Initiative indicate that four years after stopping estrogen-only therapy in women who had a hysterectomy, the increased risks of stroke and blood clots in the legs had dissipated. The reduced risk of breast cancer held steady, but the decreased risk of hip fracture seen while taking the estrogen-only therapy reverted to baseline four years after the intervention, according to the study in the Journal of the American Medical Association.Los Angeles Times 

 

WHI Researchers Examine Risks During and After Estrogen Therapy

The effects of estrogen therapy on certain health outcomes seem to disappear after therapy is discontinued, according to an analysis from the Women's Health Initiative in JAMA.

The analysis involved postmenopausal women who'd had hysterectomies and were randomized to receive conjugated equine estrogens or placebo. Researchers examined health outcomes during roughly 6 years of estrogen use and 4.5 years afterward. Among the findings:

·                         The increased risks for stroke and venous thromboembolism observed during treatment diminished after treatment ended.

·                         When breast cancer risk was considered for the entire 10.5 years' follow-up, a significant reduction in risk emerged.

·                         Over the whole follow-up, estrogen use was associated with lower cardiac risk in women aged 50 to 59, but not older women.

Journal Watch Women's Health Editor-in-Chief Dr. Andrew Kaunitz says the findings "provide ... reassurance to young menopausal women who are posthysterectomy and who present with bothersome vasomotor symptoms that use of estrogen therapy for as long as 6 years is safe."

JAMA article

 

Systolic blood pressure: Always an important clue.
This study concluded that in patients with mild to moderate chronic systolic and diastolic heart failure, baseline SBP ≤ 120 mm Hg was associated with increased cardiovascular and heart failure mortality and all-cause, cardiovascular and heart failure hospitalization independent of other baseline characteristics. The American Journal of Cardiology

 

Blood pressure is lowest in the morning, study finds
Data on 28 people without high blood pressure found that their blood pressure peaked at about 9 p.m. daily and reached its lowest level in the late morning. The study in the journal Circulation suggests that variations in blood pressure levels may not be responsible for the documented increased risk of having a heart attack or stroke in the morning. U.S. News & World Report/HealthDay News

 

Simvastatin and fenofibrate: Can they prevent vascular complications?
This article reports that simvastatin and fenofibrate exhibit a similar effect on the secretory function of human monocytes and lymphocytes and on systemic inflammation in type 2 diabetic subjects with mixed dyslipidemia. This effect may be clinically relevant in the prevention of vascular complications in metformin- and diet-treated subjects with newly diagnosed diabetic dyslipidemia. The American Journal of Cardiology

 

 

 

 B Vitamins for PMS?

Higher dietary intake of thiamine and riboflavin was associated with lower risk for new-onsetpremenstrual syndrome during 10 years of follow-up in the Nurses' Health Study

The etiology of premenstrual syndrome (PMS) remains elusive. To evaluate possible associations between dietary B vitamin intake and development of PMS, investigators conducted a case-control study nested within the Nurses' Health Study, a longitudinal cohort of women who provide biennial reports of diet and lifestyle factors and health outcomes. During 10 years of follow-up, PMS was diagnosed in 1057 participants (36%); 1968 women were identified who did not have PMS or other menstrual symptoms.

Women in the highest quintile of thiamine intake were 25% less likely to develop PMS than were those in the lowest quintile, and women in the highest quintile of riboflavin intake were 35% less likely to develop PMS. Intake of B vitamins from supplements did not lower risk for PMS — probably a reflection that such supplements often are prescribed for management of PMS.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21346091?dopt=Abstract

 

Definition of Alzheimer's Recast for First Time in Over 25 Years

Patients may ask about a widely reported recasting of the definition of Alzheimer's disease that, according to the Washington Post, "could at least double the number of Americans receiving a diagnosis of Alzheimer's and its early phases."

The criteria were first established in 1984, and the new definition, as recommended by working groups from the National Institute on Aging and the Alzheimer's Association, incorporates biomarkers such as beta-amyloid and tau proteins and acknowledges the disease's different stages. According to the reports published online in the journal Alzheimer's & Dementia, the disease has three stages:

·                         a preclinical phase

·                         a predementia phase of mild cognitive impairment

·                         a dementia phase

The recommendations acknowledge that the preclinical phase is poorly defined and that "much additional work needs to be done to validate the application of biomarkers."

Alzheimer's & Dementia introduction to recommendations (Free PDF)

Alzheimer's Association links to new diagnostic criteria (Free)

Washington Post story (Free)

New York Times story (Free)

 

 

Orthostatic Hypotension in Older Adults

The prevalence was surprisingly high.

Orthostatic hypotension is common in older adults, particularly among those taking hypotensive medications and those with diseases associated with autonomic dysfunction (e.g., diabetes, Parkinson disease). In this study from Ireland, researchers used a continuous noninvasive blood pressure (BP) monitoring device to measure orthostatic change on a single occasion in 442 community-dwelling, older adults (mean age, 72).

Mean baseline supine systolic BP (SBP) was 160 mm Hg. The changes from supine to standing SBP conformed to three general patterns:

·                     "Small drop, fast overrecovery" (25% of participants): mean SBP drop within 30 seconds, 16 mm Hg; quick recovery exceeding baseline SBP at 30 seconds

·                     "Medium drop, slow recovery" (54% of participants): mean SBP drop within 30 seconds, 35 mm Hg; return to near-baseline SBP at 30 seconds and at 2 minutes

·                     "Large drop, nonrecovery" (21% of participants): mean SBP drop within 30 seconds, 62 mm Hg; gradual but incomplete return to baseline SBP during 2 minutes of monitoring

Eighty-five participants met a previously published definition of "initial orthostatic hypotension" — a symptomatic SBP drop of >40 mm Hg within 15 seconds (Clin Sci (Lond) 2007; 112:157). These elders, compared with other participants, were more likely to have fallen recently (25% vs. 10%), to be taking >4 medications (54% vs. 39%), and to meet criteria for frailty or prefrailty (71% vs. 52%).

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21438868?dopt=Abstract

 

Oxymetazoline(Afrin) Boosts Intranasal Steroids' Effects Without Rebound Congestion

Good news for patients with severe nighttime nasal congestion

Baroody FM et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2011 Apr 127:927

 

Statin Use and Risk for Death After Pneumonia

Statin users were significantly less likely to die in the 6 months after pneumonia diagnoses.

Douglas I et al. BMJ 2011 Apr 6; 342:d1642

 

COPD — Not Just in Smokers

Among never-smokers, 12% had spirometric evidence of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Lamprecht B et al. Chest 2011 Apr 139:752

 

Impaired lung function: A heart failure clue
These authors report that abnormal spirometric findings in older adults without clinical lung disease are associated with increased heart failure risk. The American Journal of Medicine 

 

 

Total Hip Replacement in Morbidly Obese Patients

Self-reported functional outcomes were comparable to those of nonobese patients.

McCalden RW et al. J Bone Joint Surg Br 2011 Mar 93-B:321

 

Study finds declining mortality rate for people with hypertension
Data on almost 23,000 adults indicate the mortality rates of those with high blood pressuredeclined from 18.8 per 1,000 person-years in the 1971 to 1975 time period to 14.3 per 1,000 person-years in the 1988 to 1994 period. But adults with hypertension still had at least a 42% higher mortality rate compared with people without hypertension during the time frames, as well as a 45% lower reduction in cholesterol levels and a higher risk of developing diabetes, the study in the journal Circulation found. 

http://consumer.healthday.com/printer.asp?AID=652255

 

Study looks at spread of herpes virus
Data on 498 people with herpes simplex virus type 2 indicate that those who had experienced symptoms of genital herpes had the ability to pass the virus 20.1% of the time. Participants who had been asymptomatic were infectious only 10.2% of the time, but 84% of that window was when they didn't exhibit any symptoms, the study in the Journal of the American Medical Association found. TIME/Healthland blog

 

Antidepressants and reduced myocardial infarction risk. What's the connection?
Across classes of antidepressants, 12 weeks of pharmacotherapy appears to be safe in terms of MI risk. Although the mechanism for this association remains uncertain, it is possible that compliance with pharmacotherapy for depression reflects compliance with cardiovascular medications. It also is possible that a direct drug effect or improved depressed mood may attenuate the risk of MI in depressed patients. The American Journal of Medicine

 

Do Calcium Supplements Increase Heart Risk?

The Answer Proves Elusive

Calcium supplements "modestly" increase cardiovascular risk, and their use in managingosteoporosis ought to be reexamined, according to aBMJ article. Editorialists, however, declare that the "debate remains ongoing."

Researchers first examined data from the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) study on calcium and vitamin D supplementation. They found that half the participants were taking personal calcium supplements at randomization, whether they were assigned to calcium plus vitamin D or placebo.

Among the women not taking personal supplements at randomization, assignment to calcium supplements was associated with increased risk for cardiovascular events. When data on those women were combined with data from eight other randomized trials, calcium remained a source of risk. The authors estimate that treating 1000 people with calcium supplements for 5 years would lead to six additional MIs or strokes while preventing three fractures.

Editorialists worry that focusing on the WHI participants not taking personal supplements may have affected the integrity of the findings and therefore call for further study.

BMJ article

 

Pioglitazone to Prevent Progression to Diabetes

This drug lowered risk for progression but raised risk for edema and weight gain.

Patients with impaired glucose tolerance are at elevated risk for adverse cardiovascular events and progression to diabetes. To assess whether pioglitazone (Actos) can prevent or slow progression to diabetes, Texas researchers randomized 602 patients with impaired glucose tolerance to placebo or pioglitazone (starting dose of 30 mg, titrated to a target of 45 mg daily). Mean follow-up in this industry-supported trial was 2.4 years.

More placebo recipients (17%) than pioglitazone recipients (5%) progressed to diabetes. Mean glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels rose by 0.2% in the placebo group and remained unchanged in the pioglitazone group. Carotid intima–media thickness increased more slowly in the pioglitazone group. Pioglitazone recipients had more edema (13% vs. 6%) and greater weight gain (3.9 kg vs. 0.8 kg). The rate of congestive heart failure did not differ between groups.

Medline abstract (Free)

 

FDA: Benefits of Olmesartan Outweigh Potential Risk for Cardiovascular Death

The benefits of olmesartan (Benicar) "continue to outweigh its potential risks when used for the treatment of patients with high blood pressure according to the drug label," the FDA announced on Thursday.

The agency began a safety review of the angiotensin-receptor blocker in June 2010 after two studies showed a higher rate of cardiovascular death among patients taking olmesartan, compared with those taking placebo; the trials aimed to show whether olmesartan would slow progression of kidney disease in patients with diabetes. In its update on Thursday, the FDA cautions against using olmesartan to delay or prevent microalbuminuria in patients with diabetes.

The agency advises that clinicians "follow the recommendations in the drug label" when prescribing the drug. The manufacturer has agreed to conduct further studies on olmesartan's cardiovascular risk profile.

FDA MedWatch alert

 

 

Experts Issue Guidelines on Treating Painful Diabetic Neuropathy

Pregabalin should be offered for the treatment of painful diabetic neuropathy (level A evidence), according to new guidelines from the American Academy of Neurology, American Association of Neuromuscular and Electrodiagnostic Medicine, and the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.

Among the other recommendations (level B or C evidence), published in Neurology:

·                         Anticonvulsants: Gabapentin and valproate should be considered for treatment, while evidence is insufficient to recommend for or against using topiramate. Oxcarbazepine, lamotrigine, and lacosamide "probably" should not be given.

·                         Antidepressants: Amitriptyline, venlafaxine, and duloxetine should be considered, and venlafaxine can be added to gabapentin. Evidence is insufficient to recommend for or against other agents (e.g., fluoxetine).

·                         Opioids: Dextromethorphan, morphine sulfate, tramadol, and oxycodone should be considered.

·                         Other pharmacologic agents: Capsaicin or the Lidoderm patch may be considered.

·                         Nonpharmacologic methods: Electrical stimulation should be considered, while magnetic field treatment is not recommended.

Neurology article

 

PPIs Help Adult Asthma Physiology, but Not Symptoms, Analysis Finds

Routine use of proton-pump inhibitors in asthma significantly improves physiologic measures of airway flow, but it doesn't similarly improve patients' symptoms or quality of life, according to anArchives of Internal Medicine meta-analysis.

Researchers examined data from 11 randomized trials including some 2500 adult patients. Morning peak expiratory flow rates improved significantly more among those taking PPIs, especially among patients with confirmed gastroesophageal reflux. However, symptom scores and quality-of-life measures did not show an advantage for PPI treatment.

The authors argue that their analysis provides a 20-fold increase in available data compared with older analyses, but they conclude: "There is insufficient evidence to support the routine use of PPIs in the treatment of asthma."

Archives of Internal Medicine article 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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