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Myocardial Infarction (Heart Attack)

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Myocardial Infarction
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Heart Attack

NIH - Heart attack (Medical Encyclopedia) “Causes: Most heart attacks are caused by a blood clot that blocks one of the coronary arteries. The coronary arteries bring blood and oxygen to the heart. If the blood flow is blocked, the heart starves for oxygen and heart cells die. A clot most often forms in a coronary artery that has become narrow because of the build-up of a substance called plaque along the artery walls. (See: atherosclerosis) Sometimes, the plaque cracks and triggers a blood clot to form. Occasionally, sudden overwhelming stress can trigger a heart attack. ... Risk factors for heart attack and coronary artery disease include: • Bad genes (hereditary factors) • Being male • Diabetes • Getting older • High blood pressure • Smoking • Too much fat in your diet • Unhealthy cholesterol levels, especially high LDL ("bad") cholesterol and low HDL ("good") cholesterol Higher-than-normal levels of homocysteine, C-reactive protein, and fibrinogen may also increase your risk for a heart attack. Homocysteine is an amino acid. C-reactive protein and fibrinogen are linked to inflammation. Fibrinogen is also involved in blood clotting. Symptoms: Chest pain is a major symptom of heart attack. However, some people may have little or no chest pain, especially the elderly and those with diabetes. This is called a silent heart attack. The pain may be felt in only one part of the body or move from your chest to your arms, shoulder, neck, teeth, jaw, belly area, or back. The pain can be severe or mild. It can feel like: • Squeezing or heavy pressure • A tight band around the chest • Something heavy sitting on your chest • Bad indigestion Pain usually lasts longer than 20 minutes. Rest and a medicine called nitroglycerine do not completely relieve the pain of a heart attack. Other symptoms of a heart attack include: • Shortness of breath • Nausea or vomiting • Anxiety • Cough • Fainting • Lightheadedness - dizziness • Palpitations (feeling like your heart is beating too fast) • Sweating, which may be extreme “

NIH - Heart Attack

NIH - Heart Attack InteractiveTutorial(Patient Education Institute)

NHS – Heart attack (includes video) “Some people do not feel any pain during a heart attack. This is known as a 'silent' heart attack and tends to affect people with diabetes, or those who are over 75 years of age. Some evidence suggests that up to 20% of mild heart attacks go undiagnosed. This means that some people, because of previous undiagnosed attacks, may be suffering progressive damage to the heart muscle. ... Diagnosing a heart attack: If you are having a suspected heart attack, you will usually be taken to hospital so that tests can be carried out to confirm the diagnosis. Some of these tests are outlined below. Electrocardiograph (ECG) An electrocardiograph (ECG) helps to trace the electrical activity of the heart. Every time your heart beats, it produces tiny electrical signals. An ECG machine records these signals on to paper, allowing your doctor to see how well your heart is functioning. An ECG can detect damage to your heart muscle, or problems with your heart rhythm. It can also show if you have had a heart attack, either recently, or some time ago. The test takes about five minutes and is painless. During the test, electrodes (flat metal discs) are attached to your arms, legs, and chest. Wires from the electrodes are connected to the ECG machine, which records the electrical impulses. Cardiac enzyme tests When your heart has been damaged by a heart attack, it causes certain enzymes to slowly leak into your blood. Enzymes are special proteins which help regulate the chemical reactions that take place in your body. If you have had a suspected heart attack, a sample of your blood will be taken so that it can be tested for these heart enzymes. Your enzyme levels will be measured through a series of blood samples taken over a few days. A chest X-ray may also be taken to look for any enlargement (swelling) of your heart.”

Highlighted Articles

Hospitals Slow in Heart Cases, Research Finds (2008)"Delays were more likely in patients whose hearts stopped at night or on the weekend, who were admitted for noncardiac illnesses, in hospitals with fewer than 250 beds and in units without heart monitors."

Hospitals slow to defibrillate heart patients (2008) "Just because you're in the hospital doesn't mean you'll quickly get treated if your heart stops beating. About one-third of patients don't get a potentially live-saving shock within the recommended two minutes, a new study found. Those who don't get prompt defibrillation are more likely to die or end up brain damaged or disabled, the study showed. For every minute of delay, the chances of survival worsens, researchers reported in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine. "It is probably fair to say that most patients assume - unfortunately, incorrectly - that a hospital would be the best place to survive a cardiac arrest ." "

What initial dose of aspirin is right for STEMI patients? (2008)"An initial dose of 162-mg aspirin may be as effective as and perhaps safer than 325 mg for the acute treatment of ST-elevation MI (STEMI), a new study suggests [1]."

Brief, High Doses Of Folate -- B Vitamin -- Blunt Damage From Heart Attack

High-Dose Folic Acid Pretreatment Blunts Cardiac Dysfunction During Ischemia Coupled to Maintenance of High-Energy Phosphates and Reduces Postreperfusion Injury (Circulation 2008) "Background-The B vitamin folic acid (FA) is important to mitochondrial protein and nucleic acid synthesis, is an antioxidant, and enhances nitric oxide synthase activity. Here, we tested whether FA reduces myocardial ischemic dysfunction and postreperfusion injury. . Conclusions-FA pretreatment blunts myocardial dysfunction during ischemia and ameliorates postreperfusion injury. This is coupled to preservation of high-energy phosphates, reducing subsequent reactive oxygen species generation, eNOS-uncoupling, and postreperfusion cell death."

Eating your greens could prove life-saving if a heart attack strikes (2007) "A diet rich in leafy vegetables may minimize the tissue damage caused by heart attacks, according to researchers at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University. Their findings, published in the November 12 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggest that the chemical nitrite, found in many vegetables, could be the secret ingredient in the heart-healthy Mediterranean diet. … Researchers now have good evidence that hearts undergoing heart attacks have a “backup” pathway for making nitric oxide. Triggered by falling oxygen levels, enzymes in heart muscle convert nitrite stored there into nitric acid that can then help minimize tissue damage. Nitrite in the diet comes mainly from vegetables—celery, beets, and spinach, lettuce and other leafy types. Once consumed, nitrite exits the bloodstream and then accumulates and become stored in organs such as the heart, kidney and brain. … Dr. Lefer says that the nitrite levels found cardioprotective in his study can easily be achieved by consuming more vegetables containing the chemical. That dietary change, he says, might be especially helpful for people at increased heart-attack risk—those who’ve already suffered a heart attack, have been diagnosed with cardiovascular disease or have a family history of it."

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Myocardial Infarction (Heart Attack)

General Information

NEWS:

Angina Strikes 1 in 5 Heart Attack Survivors “One year after suffering a heart attack, nearly one in five survivors experience chest pain, according to a U.S. study of almost 2,000 patients. Researchers found that 389 (19.9 percent) of the patients reported angina (episodic chest pain) one year after hospitalization for heart attack. This included 24 (1.2 percent) who reported daily chest pain, 59 (3 percent) reporting weekly chest pain, and 306 (15.6 percent) reporting chest pain less than once a week. Patients who reported chest pain were more likely to be younger, non-white males with prior chest pain who'd undergone prior coronary artery bypass surgery and experienced recurring rest chest pain while hospitalized for heart attack.“

Dark Chocolate: Half A Bar Per Week May Keep Heart Attack Risk At Bay “Chocolate amounts are critical. "We are talking of a moderate consumption. The best effect is obtained by consuming an average amount of 6.7 grams of chocolate per day, corresponding to a small square of chocolate twice or three times a week. Beyond these amounts the beneficial effect tends to disappear". From a practical point of view, as the common chocolate bar is 100 grams, the study states that less than half a bar of dark chocolate consumed during the week may become a healthy habit. What about the milk chocolate? "Previous studies," the young investigator continues, "have demonstrated that milk interferes with the absorption of polyphenols. That is why our study considered just the dark chocolate". “

Depression a predictor of death after heart attack “In people who have suffered a heart attack, depression and a high heart rate at night, while often coexistent, are independent predictors of death, according to research published in the journal Psychosomatic Medicine. …According to the investigators, disturbed sleep, which is frequently reported in patients with depression, may help explain the association of nighttime elevated heart rate with mortality. There is evidence that arousals from sleep that are associated with increased heart rate may provoke events related to ischemia (restriction of the blood supply and thus oxygen to the tissues) and abnormal heart rhythms in patients with heart disease, they note.”

Erectile Dysfunction Gives Early Warning Of A Heart Attack, Warns Expert “Erectile dysfunction gives a two to three year early warning of a heart attack, warns an expert on the British Medical Journal website.”

Heart Attack Not A Death Sentence

Home Defibrillators Save Lives in Study “Having a defibrillator at home can help a heart attack survivor live through a second crisis, but so can CPR and at a much lower cost. That's the bottom line from the first test of using these heart-shocking devices in the home.”

Hospitals Slow in Heart Cases, Research Finds “Delays were more likely in patients whose hearts stopped at night or on the weekend, who were admitted for noncardiac illnesses, in hospitals with fewer than 250 beds and in units without heart monitors.”

Hospitals slow to defibrillate heart patients “Just because you’re in the hospital doesn’t mean you’ll quickly get treated if your heart stops beating. About one-third of patients don’t get a potentially live-saving shock within the recommended two minutes, a new study found. Those who don’t get prompt defibrillation are more likely to die or end up brain damaged or disabled, the study showed. For every minute of delay, the chances of survival worsens, researchers reported in Thursday’s New England Journal of Medicine. “It is probably fair to say that most patients assume — unfortunately, incorrectly — that a hospital would be the best place to survive a cardiac arrest …” “

'Painful legacy' of heart attack “One in five people recovering from a heart attack is still having chest pain a year afterwards, a US study suggests. The journal Archives of Internal Medicine reported some suffered angina every day, despite bypass surgery. ... The questionnaires revealed that those most likely to have chest pain were younger men who had undergone heart bypass operations, or men who smoked or had depressive symptoms.”

ARTICLES:

JAMA patient page. Myocardial infarction.

JOURNAL ARTICLES:

Atrial fibrillation in acute myocardial infarction: a systematic review of the incidence, clinical features and prognostic implications. (Eur Heart J. 2008)

Dietary Patterns and the Risk of Acute Myocardial Infarction in 52 Countries (Circulation. 2008)

Factors associated with longer time from symptom onset to hospital presentation for patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction. (Arch Intern Med. 2008) “CONCLUSIONS: Patient subgroups with a combination of factors (older age, women, Hispanic or black race, and DM) have particularly long delay times that may be 60 minutes longer than subgroups without those characteristics. Improving patient responsiveness in these subgroups represents an important opportunity to improve quality of care and minimize disparities in care.”

Heavy snoring is a risk factor for case fatality and poor short-term prognosis after a first acute myocardial infarction. (Sleep. 2008)

Long-term prognostic factors of young patients ( (Eur J Cardiovasc Prev Rehabil. 2008) “CONCLUSION: Persistence of smoking is the most powerful predictor for the recurrence of cardiac events in patients with premature AMI.”

Long-Term Trends in the Incidence of Heart Failure After Myocardial Infarction. (Circulation. 2008)

Outcomes of Acute Myocardial Infarction in Nonagenarians (The American Journal of Cardiology 2008) “In conclusion, AMI in nonagenarians is associated with high mortality, with over 50% of patients dying within one year of presentation; elevated creatinine and lower hemoglobin are strong predictors of adverse prognosis, and lower body mass index and the presence of dementia add independent prognostic significance.“

Nighttime Heart Rate and Survival in Depressed Patients Post Acute Myocardial Infarction. (Psychosom Med. 2008) “Conclusions: Mean day and nighttime HR values are higher in depressed patients than in nondepressed patients post AMI. Depression and elevated nighttime HR, but not daytime HR, are independent predictors of survival in these patients. Although depressed patients have a higher nighttime HR than nondepressed patients, nighttime HR predicts mortality in both depressed and nondepressed patients.”

Relation Between Body Mass Index, Waist Circumference, and Death After Acute Myocardial Infarction (Circulation 2008)

Sex Differences in Medical Care and Early Death After Acute Myocardial Infarction (Circulation 2008) “Conclusions—Overall, no sex differences in in-hospital mortality rates after AMI were observed after multivariable adjustment. However, women with STEMI had higher adjusted mortality rates than men. The underuse of evidence-based treatments and delayed reperfusion among women represent potential opportunities for reducing sex disparities in care and outcome after AMI.”

Sudden death after myocardial infarction. (JAMA. 2008)

 

 

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