Go Back Natural Medicine Talk > Health > Heart Health

Reply
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
� #1
Old 04-24-2009, 07:56 AM
Enlightener
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Out of sight
Posts: 791
liverock will become famous soon enoughliverock will become famous soon enough
Default Simple Finger Test Indicates Heart Attack Risk

Cardiologists have long been seeking a simple non-invasive method of checking for future heart and stroke problems and the latest research may have come up with the answer.

Simple finger test of endothelial cell health - EndoPAT at iHealthBulletin News

Quote:
Results of a Mayo Clinic study show that a simple, non-invasive finger sensor test - called EndoPAT - is �highly predictive� of a major cardiac event, such as a heart attack or stroke, for people who are considered at low or moderate risk, according to researchers.

The study will be presented March 31, 2009 at the American College of Cardiology Annual Scientific Session in Orlando (0917-7).

The noninvasive finger test device, called the EndoPAT by Itamar Medical, measures the health of endothelial cells by measuring blood flow. Endothelial cells line the blood vessels and regulate normal blood flow. Research has shown that if the cells don�t function properly - a condition called endothelial dysfunction - it can set the stage for atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) and lead to major cardiovascular health problems. Previously, there was no simple test for endothelium function, says Amir Lerman, M.D., a cardiologist at Mayo Clinic and the senior author of the study.

Forty-nine percent of patients whose EndoPAT test indicated poor endothelial function had a cardiac event during the seven-year study. Researchers at Mayo Clinic and Tufts-New England Medical Center in Boston used the device to test 270 patients between the ages of 42 and 66 and followed their progress from August 1999 to August 2007. These patients already knew that they had low-to-medium risk of experiencing a major heart event, based on their Framingham Risk Score. The score is the commonly used risk predictor and was developed from the Framingham Heart Study, a longitudinal study of heart disease.

Some of their risk factors included high blood pressure, high cholesterol, obesity and a family history of heart disease, Dr. Lerman says. �The results of the study may help identify a discriminating tool beyond the Framingham Risk Score,� he says. �And the results of these individual tests may help physicians change a patient�s medications or recommend other therapies, so they don�t have a heart attack or stroke later on.�
The test may be used in an individualized medicine model of risk assessment of the patients, Dr. Lerman says.

EndoPAT, which received U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval in 2003, consists of digital recording equipment and two finger probes that look like large thimbles. For the test, which takes 15 minutes, probes are placed on each index finger and hooked up to a small machine to measure blood flow. A standard blood pressure cuff is placed on one arm; the arm without the cuff is the control. A reading of the fingers� blood flow rate begins, and then the blood pressure cuff on one arm is inflated for a few minutes and then deflated, allowing for three timed readings.
The role of the inflated blood pressure cuff is to occlude and then release blood flow to assess reactive hyperemia (RH), the normal blood flow response that occurs when occlusion is released. In the study, 49 percent of the patients who went on to have a cardiac event had a low RH score.

A low RH signal - indicating a lower blood flow response - is consistent with endothelial dysfunction and potentially impaired vascular health that may lead to or serve as a marker for future events, Dr. Lerman says.

Reply With Quote
Reply Bookmark and Share

Thread Tools
Display Modes


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Study Linking Calcium to Heart Attack Risk Flawed, says doctor kind2creatures Heart Health 4 08-18-2010 07:18 AM
Calcium pills 'increase risk of heart attack' claim! knightofalbion Heart Health 7 08-03-2010 11:39 AM
If you think you're having a heart attack... knightofalbion Heart Health 6 08-03-2010 03:36 AM
Calcium supplements may increase the risk of a heart attack in older women Iggy Dalrymple Heart Health 7 03-28-2008 06:58 PM
Flu doubles heart attack risk Xania Alternative Therapies 0 12-06-2007 12:42 PM