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Pharma
Carotid artery distension predicts coronary events
Ultrasound
imaging is a simple, noninvasive way to detect distension of the carotid arteries,
French researchers reported in the issue of Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and
Vascular Biology. The mechanical properties of arteries appear to be intrinsically
involved with coronary artery health. To assess the predictive value of carotid
wall mechanics for CHD, Dr Nathalie Leone of the Faculte de Medecine Xavier
Bichat in Paris and colleagues in the Three-City Study (Bordeaux, Dijon, and
Montpellier) performed carotid ultrasound imaging on 3,337 individuals 65 years
or older.
The investigators used B-mode ultrasound to examine the carotid arteries, which
is a valid and reproducible method of assessing carotid distension, Leone commented.
It could be used to supplement the major traditional risk factors, such as tobacco
consumption, high blood pressure, high cholesterol and diabetes, to identify
high-risk individuals, she added. The average follow-up time was 43.4 months,
during which there were 1,278 CHD events.
The team found that carotid distension the relative change in the diameter of
the artery was significantly associated with CHD risk. Patients with the highest
scores had an 80 percent greater risk of CHD compared with those with the lowest
scores. While the build-up of plague in the arteries (atherosclerosis) was linked
to carotid distension, it was not an independent risk factor for coronary events.
Whether local blood pressure is a cause or a consequence of carotid distension
is also unclear, she added.
Beta-blocker therapy is not advisable in these patients, Leone and colleagues
caution. They noted that by decreasing heart rate, beta-blocking agents may
enhance the magnitude of arterial distension. Beta-blockers will not work as
well as angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or calcium antagonists in these
patients, they added.
Reuters
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