The Herald

Warning system can predict heart attacks years ahead

- JOHN VON RADOWITZ

FATAL heart attacks can be predicted years in advance using a new technique to identify “ticking time bomb” arteries, research has shown.

The number one cause of heart attacks is inflamed plaques – fatty deposits on artery walls – rupturing and blocking blood flow to the heart.

Knowing which plaques are most likely to trigger a heart attack would allow doctors to treat the most at-risk patients with more aggressive therapies.

The new technique looks for fat-modifying chemical signals released by the most dangerous arterial plaques.

By analysing computeris­ed tomography (CT) scan images of the fat surroundin­g arteries, scientists were able to flag up patients at risk of deadly heart attacks years before they occurred.

The new heart attack warning system, called the Fat Attenuatio­n Index (FAI), was tested in a large study published by The Lancet medical journal.

Its findings were also presented at the European Society of Cardiology congress taking place in Munich, Germany. The study monitored the progress of 3,900 heart patients from Germany and the US for 10 years after they had undergone a coronary CT scan, or angiogram.

FAI predicted fatal heart attacks many years before they happened.

Patients with an abnormal FAI reading were up to nine times more at risk of having a fatal heart attack in the next five years than those with normal readings, the research showed.

Study leader Professor Charalambo­s Antoniades, from Oxford University, said: “This new technology may prove transforma­tive for primary and secondary prevention. For the first time we have a set of biomarkers, derived from a routine test that is already used in everyday clinical practice, that measures what we call the ‘residual cardiovasc­ular risk’ currently missed by all risk scores and non-invasive tests.

“Knowing who is at increased risk for a heart attack could allow us to intervene early enough to prevent it. I expect these biomarkers to become an essential part of standard CT coronary angiograph­y reporting in the coming years.”

Each year, more than 100,000 people die from a heart attack or related stroke in the UK alone. Heart disease and stroke remain the two biggest overall causes of death worldwide.

 ??  ?? „ Fire ripped through the historic building in Belfast city centre.
„ Fire ripped through the historic building in Belfast city centre.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom