Sibling
Heart Disease A Risk Factor For Brother Or Sister
Persons with a brother or
sister who had a heart attack at an early age are at increased risk
for heart disease, according to a study published in the medical journal
Circulation.
It has long been accepted
that a family history of heart disease is a sign of potential problems,
says Dr. Roger S. Blumenthal, director of the Johns Hopkins University
Ciccarone Preventive Cardiology Center.
Defining
the Risk
But the new study Dr.
Blumenthal conducted helps experts define that risk.
The researchers used an advanced
diagnostic technique called electron beam tomography (also called EBT
or ultrafast CT) to look for calcium deposits in more than 8,500
people with no apparent symptoms of heart disease. These deposits can
eventually grow to block an artery.
As expected, the test found
that anyone whose father or mother had had a heart attack was almost
twice as likely to have such deposits as someone whose parents had not
had such an event.
But it also found that anyone
with a brother or sister who experienced an early heart attack was three
times as likely to have such deposits.
"Our data strongly support
the idea that the use of family history in assessing risk is important,"
Dr. Blumenthal says.
The researchers chose to look
for calcium deposits because they provide an early warning sign of heart
disease, Dr. Blumenthal notes.
Dr. Blumenthal believes
the evidence is strong enough for family history to be added to the
four major risk factors for heart disease that were identified by the
landmark Framingham Heart Study.
Those risk factors are elevated
levels of cholesterol and blood pressure, as well as age and cigarette
smoking.
It was the Framingham study
that identified a doubled cardiac risk for someone with a parent who
had had a major heart problem, Dr. Blumenthal points out.
"Now they are analyzing data
on whether having a brother or sister with a cardiac event indicates
an increased risk," Dr. Blumenthal says. "My suspicion, based on our
data, is that having such a brother or sister will have greater prognostic
power."
Stay
Vigilant, Experts Say
He suggests that anyone with
a sibling with heart problems have a diagnostic test beyond the
standard measures of risk. One test that Dr. Blumenthal recommends is
for blood levels of C-reactive protein, a marker of inflammation that
has been linked in many studies to increased heart disease risk.
The American Heart
Association (AHA) does not recommend the electron beam tomography
test used in the Hopkins study because "there is, as yet, no data demonstrating
that actual outcomes are improved in patients who have the test and
have an intervention based on the finding," according to an AHA
statement.
Whatever extra tests might
be done, Dr. Robert O. Bonow, a professor of medicine at Northwestern
University and a spokesman for the AHA, says, "It is
reasonable to recommend that all treatable risk factors should be identified
and treated very aggressively" when a young brother or sister has a
heart attack.
"What might be a satisfactory
level of LDL [bad] cholesterol for an average person might be high for
such a person," Dr. Bonow comments. "The same goes for blood pressure.
And those people above all should not be smoking. You can't control
your genes, but you can control your smoking habits."
Always consult your physician
for more information.
Online
Resources
(Our Organization is not responsible
for the content of Internet sites.)
American
Heart Association
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Everyday
Choices, AHA, ADA, and ACS
Go
Red for Women Campaign, AHA
HealthierUS.Gov
National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
National
Institutes of Health (NIH)
National
Library of Medicine
US
Health and Human Services |
November
2004
Sibling
Heart Disease A Risk Factor For Brother Or Sister
Defining
the Risk
Stay
Vigilant, Experts Say
Treadmill
Testing May Predict Heart Disease in Healthy Men
Online
Resources
Treadmill
Testing May Predict Heart Disease in Healthy Men
A brisk trot on the treadmill
can clarify the cardiovascular risk for men who do not have heart
disease but who do have risk factors pointing toward future problems,
says a new study in the medical journal Circulation.
Men with such risk factors
who did poorly on the test were twice as likely to have a heart attack
or other major cardiac problem over the next decade compared to those
who did well, says a Framingham Heart Study report.
Exercise stress testing, in
which someone goes faster and faster on a treadmill while heart performance
is measured, is generally not recommended for routine screening of people
with no history of symptoms of heart disease.
The new study is the first
to evaluate the test among people who have no heart symptoms but do
have such risk factors as diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol,
and smoking.
The study, which included
1,431 such men and 1,621 women, found a doubled risk for men whose heart
rate did not reach the expected target rate or who had a heartbeat abnormality
called ST-segment depression, compared to men who did not have those
problems.
"Our results suggest that
exercise testing may be of benefit in asymptomatic men with intermediate
to high risk," says study author Dr. Gary J. Balady, a professor of
medicine at Boston University School of Medicine.
Even though women develop
heart disease at the same rate as men, the study authors say that women
did not experience the same number of heart events as men in this study,
possibly because women studied were in their 40s and 50s, and heart
disease is more of a problem for women at older ages.
According to the American
Heart Association, in 2001, over 43 million American women
were older than 50. The risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) increases
with age, and that is why it is important to raise awareness
of this major public health issue for older women.
The AHA states
that coronary heart disease claims the lives of 248,184 females annually
compared with 41,394 lives from breast cancer and 65,632 from lung cancer.
Treadmill testing usually
is not done for someone with no symptoms of heart disease, says Dr.
Gerald Fletcher, a preventive cardiologist at the Mayo Clinic and a
spokesman for the American Heart Association.
For persons without symptoms
who require assessment, such as a middle-aged, inactive man who is about
to start an exercise program, "it might be wise to do a stress test
of some sort," Dr. Fletcher notes.
But it is preferable to do
a more intensive test, such as treadmill exercise accompanied by an
echocardiogram, which give an image of heart performance, he says.
A study reported recently
in the Journal of the American Medical Association
says that usefulness of results from exercise stress tests to predict
heart disease were unclear.
Always consult your physician
for more information. |