• According to a new study, patients taking beta-blockers and antiplatelet medications (such as aspirin) are at high risk of suffering a heart attack during very hot weather. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Likewise, aspirin and other antiplatelet drugs can reduce the risk of a heart attack. (scitechdaily.com)
  • It turned out that users of beta-blockers or antiplatelet medications were likelier to have heart attacks during the hottest days compared to control days. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Antiplatelet medication use was associated with a 63% increase in risk and beta-blockers with a 65% increase. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Yet younger patients taking beta-blockers and antiplatelet medications were more susceptible to heat-related heart attack than older patients, despite the older ones having more heart disease. (scitechdaily.com)
  • After enrolling, patients' medication regimens were optimized so that almost all were taking aspirin, a second antiplatelet drug, and a statin. (the-hospitalist.org)
  • Prescription data was extracted on all patients coded with TIA or stroke, age ≥ 55 years, including antiplatelet/anticoagulant or lipid lowering medications prescribed in the last 120 days before data collection. (sapc.ac.uk)
  • It is interesting to note that scripted cholesterol-reducing medications, such as the statins, and over-the-counter anti-inflammatory/anti-platelet aggregation medications, such as aspirin, a COX-1 inhibitor, are considered the first line of treatment or prophylactic agents for individuals with hypercholesterolemia. (ift.org)
  • Those medications may include a beta-blocker , ACE inhibitor, statin and aspirin," said Dr. William Abraham, director of the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine at The Ohio State University Medical Center. (healthstatus.com)
  • Wald and Law called their drug the Polypill, a combination of several powerful cardiovascular medications-a statin, an ACE inhibitor, a beta-blocker and a thiazide-as well as aspirin. (protomag.com)
  • way of initiating therapy.11 This program, which was initiated in a university hospital setting in 1994, focused on the initiation of aspirin, statin (titrated to achieve LDL-C Յ100 mg/dL), ␤-blocker, and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor therapy in conjunction with dietary and exercise counseling in patients with established CHD before hospital discharge. (slideshare.net)
  • A blood pressure medication called an ACE-inhibitor (such as ramipril or lisinopril) may be prescribed. (myperipheralarterydisease.com)
  • The protective effects of statins were even greater in men who took them before and after being diagnosed with prostate cancer. (rxwiki.com)
  • Although there is evidence to support the beneficial effects of statins on major cardiovascular events, few studies address the protective effect of statins on limb outcome. (medscape.com)
  • The drugs are called PCSK9 inhibitors, which can amplify the benefits of statins, the most effective cholesterol-lowering medications currently available. (uclahealth.org)
  • PCSK9 inhibitors also protect people who can't take statins. (uclahealth.org)
  • The statins are very good, but PCSK9 inhibitors are even better. (uclahealth.org)
  • When added to statin medications, PCSK9 inhibitors further reduced levels of LDL cholesterol in the blood, and decreased the incidence of stroke and heart attack compared with placebo. (uclahealth.org)
  • Improved use of aspirin, ␤-blockers, and ACE inhibitors was also observed. (slideshare.net)
  • Statins are used to lower cholesterol and are sold under a number of brand names, including Lipitor ( atorvastatin ), Crestor ( rosuvastatin ) and Zocor ( simvastatin ). (rxwiki.com)
  • As a result of these new recommendations, stable compliant patients may potentially be switched from a lower dose statin to atorvastatin 80mg. (sapc.ac.uk)
  • Of the 3354 stroke survivors in our dataset, only 1% were prescribed atorvastatin 80mg, and about one third of patients were on no statin therapy at all. (sapc.ac.uk)
  • A "statin" cholesterol-lowering medication (such as atorvastatin or rosuvastatin) should also be prescribed to reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke. (myperipheralarterydisease.com)
  • That "discussion" is about whether a patient with no history of heart problems or stroke should start using preventive therapies, like a cholesterol-lowering statin or a daily aspirin. (mentalhelp.net)
  • Your doctor may prescribe statins or other medications to help control cholesterol, blood sugar and blood pressure. (stroke.org)
  • A new class of cholesterol-lowering medication reduces the risk of stroke and heart attack, according to the results of a large nationwide clinical trial. (uclahealth.org)
  • All participants were already taking the maximum dose of statins that they could tolerate, to reduce their cholesterol. (uclahealth.org)
  • The statins, when they came along, were far and away more powerful at lowering cholesterol levels than any other prior drug, they were dramatically effective," said Dr. Saver. (uclahealth.org)
  • Despite their great success at lowering cholesterol, however, statins do have some side effects, so not everyone can take them. (uclahealth.org)
  • When my high-risk patients are not taking their cholesterol-lowering statin medicine, the calcium score can be a very powerful motivator for them to follow my professional advice and prescription. (texasheart.org)
  • For mild to moderate disease, aspirin and statin cholesterol medications are used to decrease the progression of your plaque. (southnassau.org)
  • allows you very readily over the phone to up-titrate medications that control your blood pressure, control your blood sugar, control your cholesterol," she said. (startribune.com)
  • RxWiki News) Cholesterol lowering medications called statins are among the most commonly prescribed medicines in the US. (rxwiki.com)
  • New research is suggesting these medications may lower more than cholesterol in prostate cancer patients. (rxwiki.com)
  • In clinical practice, it will improve management of the ABCS (aspirin use for high risk patients, blood pressure control, cholesterol management and smoking cessation). (cdc.gov)
  • A decline in clinical care scores was expected as a result, Sonier said, with the vascular disease score based on whether people took daily statin medications and aspirin, and kept their blood pressure down. (startribune.com)
  • Decisions included 1) whether to restrict surveillance to patients with recent blood pressure measurements, 2) varying the number and recency of encounters to define the population at risk of hypertension, 3) how to define hypertension (diagnosis codes, antihypertensive medication, blood pressure measurements, or combinations of these), and 4) how to handle multiple blood pressure measurements on the same day. (cdc.gov)
  • A hypertension surveillance strategy that includes a population with at least 1 clinical encounter with measured blood pressure in the previous 2 years and identifies hypertension using all available data (1 diagnosis code, 1 antihypertensive medication, and 2 elevated blood pressure values 140/90 mm Hg on separate days) generated estimates in line with population-based survey data. (cdc.gov)
  • We identified hypertension using three criteria, alone or in combination: diagnosis codes, blood pressure (BP) measurements, and antihypertensive medications. (cdc.gov)
  • We compared AEMR-US estimates of hypertension prevalence and control against those from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2017-18, which defined hypertension as BP 130/80mmHg or 1 antihypertensive medication. (cdc.gov)
  • The selected three-criteria e-phenotype (1 diagnosis code, 2 BP measurements of 130/80mmHg, or 1 antihypertensive medication) yielded similar trends in hypertension prevalence as NHANES: 42.2% (AEMR-US) vs. 44.9% (NHANES) overall, 39.0% vs. 38.7% among women, and 46.5% vs. 50.9% among men. (cdc.gov)
  • 60 kg, propensity to bleed, concomitant use of medications that increase the risk of bleeding (5.1) . (nih.gov)
  • In the propensity score matching analysis, the effect of statin on the risk of lower-extremity amputation was consistent. (medscape.com)
  • By using a nationwide DM cohort database in Taiwan, we sought to investigate whether the use of statins is associated with a lower-extremity amputation rate in a high-risk population with known PAD as compared with two propensity score-matched cohorts without statin use (including a nonstatin lipid-lowering agents group and a nonuser group) while taking into consideration the competing risk of death. (medscape.com)
  • Participants who took statins, the researchers found, had other health conditions in addition to prostate cancer, and were more likely to be taking aspirin, diabetes medication and medications to treat high blood pressure than men who didn't take statins. (rxwiki.com)
  • To investigate whether the use of statin is associated with a risk reduction in lower-extremity amputation in type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD). (medscape.com)
  • The guidelines recommend that patients with SIHD generally receive a "package" of guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT) that includes lifestyle interventions and medications shown to improve outcomes. (acc.org)
  • They say that women are less likely to receive treatment, risk-reduction interventions, and medication such as statins, aspirin, and beta blockers than men. (medicalnewstoday.com)
  • Cardiovascular stabilization can include lifestyle changes, medication management, and surgical interventions. (alliedacademies.org)
  • This information is used to develop a treatment plan, which may include lifestyle changes, medications, and/or surgical interventions [ 3 ]. (alliedacademies.org)
  • This information may be useful in developing new interventions, including medications , and targeting existing interventions. (cdc.gov)
  • In March, the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) released their primary prevention guidelines that largely relegated aspirin to the bench. (tctmd.com)
  • Lipid- lowering medication use at the time of discharge increased from 6% before initiation of the program to 86% after CHAMP was implemented (PϽ0.001). (slideshare.net)
  • In an analysis of almost 20 000 patients in the Swedish Registry of Cardiac Intensive Care, the 1-year unadjusted mortality rate in patients who received statins at or before discharge was 4.0%, compared with 9.3% in patients who were not dis- charged on statins. (slideshare.net)
  • Since they were first introduced in the late 1980s, the class of drugs called statins (e.g. (uclahealth.org)
  • Medications such as aspirin, statins, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, or medication for urinary problems have the potential to affect PSA levels. (myriad.com)
  • Compared with statin nonusers who were never treated with lipid-lowering drugs, this study found that statin users had a lower risk of lower-extremity amputation and cardiovascular death in patients with DM and PAD. (medscape.com)
  • The researchers focused on ICH because the results from previous meta-analyses, as well as the individual trials, have yielded conflicting findings regarding the effect of aspirin therapy on this "devastating" adverse event. (tctmd.com)
  • Learn about the latest findings on the medications you're taking. (rxwiki.com)
  • Only if prospective randomized trials confirm these findings should statins be recommended to patients who are diagnosed with prostate cancer. (rxwiki.com)
  • Medications, such as aspirin, beta-blockers, and statins, are commonly prescribed to patients with cardiovascular disease to prevent further cardiovascular events and improve overall cardiovascular health. (alliedacademies.org)
  • Aspirin is the most commonly used blood thinner. (myperipheralarterydisease.com)
  • About half of the reduction in CVD mortality in the past 20 years in Western countries is likely related to the appropriate use of preventive medications after an initial CV event, the authors write. (medscape.com)
  • Overall, the use of statins after diagnosis was associated with a decreased risk in prostate cancer mortality. (rxwiki.com)
  • Darren DeWalt, MD, FACP, John R. and Helen B. Chambliss Distinguished Professor and chief of the division of general medicine and clinical epidemiology at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine in Chapel Hill, said he typically starts talking about statins once a patient's 10-year atherosclerotic CVD risk estimation reaches the 7.5% to 10% range, spelling out what a one-third reduction in cardiovascular risk would mean. (acpinternist.org)
  • Results from a new meta-analysis provide yet more support against the routine use of aspirin for the primary prevention of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD). (tctmd.com)
  • If a patient's score is 7.5%, for example, he explains that a statin will decrease the chance of a heart attack or stroke to roughly 5% over the next decade. (acpinternist.org)
  • Research reported by Harvard Health Publishing reveals when you take a low-dose aspirin daily , it could keep you from having a stroke or heart attack if you're at risk for heart disease. (marijuanadoctors.com)
  • Putting stroke medication guidelines into clinical practice: Is this the best approach for patients? (sapc.ac.uk)
  • Our aim was to investigate current uptake by stroke survivors of these medications in practices in the UK, and to assess the clinical impact of these recommendations in general practice. (sapc.ac.uk)
  • A significant number of stroke survivors fail to take any secondary prevention medication. (sapc.ac.uk)
  • A blood-thinning medication is usually prescribed to reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke. (myperipheralarterydisease.com)
  • Geary L, Aronius J, Wettermark B, Hasselström J, Sjöborg B, von Euler M. Sociodemographic factors are associated with utilization of statins after ischemic stroke/TIA. (janusinfo.se)
  • Early identification and intervention with statins is effective in reducing illness and death in affected persons-but most are not diagnosed early. (cdc.gov)
  • Schmidt-Mende K, Andersen M, Wettermark B, Hasselström J. Educational intervention on medication reviews aiming to reduce acute healthcare consumption in elderly patients with potentially inappropriate medicines -A pragmatic open-label cluster randomized controlled trial in primary care. (janusinfo.se)
  • Although the combination of darunavir, cobicistat, emtricitabine, and tenofovir will not cure HIV, these medications may decrease your chance of developing acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and HIV-related illnesses such as serious infections or cancer. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Taking these medications along with practicing safer sex and making other life-style changes may decrease the risk of transmitting the HIV virus to other people. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Low-dose aspirin use in individuals without symptomatic cardiovascular disease increased the risk of intracranial hemorrhage (ICH), and this risk was particularly pronounced in Asian individuals and those with a low body mass index (BMI), report investigators. (tctmd.com)
  • Among every 1,000 people treated with low-dose aspirin instead of control, two more had intracranial hemorrhage events. (tctmd.com)
  • The new meta-analysis includes these randomized controlled trials, as well as 10 others, comparing low-dose aspirin versus a control therapy in 134,446 individuals without ASCVD. (tctmd.com)
  • In certain cases, low-dose rivaroxaban may also be added to aspirin. (myperipheralarterydisease.com)
  • For decades, a tiny encampment of researchers has held that statin treatment is a hoax. (protomag.com)
  • Creating a link between the initiation of lipid-lowering medication (and other secondary-prevention measures) and the patient's cardiac hospitalization strength- ens the perception that this therapy is essential for the prevention of recurrent events and is an essential part of the patient's long-term treatment. (slideshare.net)
  • Current guidelines recommend statin treatment of PAD patients. (medscape.com)
  • Hospital-based initiation of therapy may also help alleviate patient concerns about monitoring, medication tolerability, and side effects. (slideshare.net)
  • The combination of darunavir, cobicistat, emtricitabine, and tenofovir is used to treat human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in adults and children weighing at least 88 pounds (40 kg) who have not been treated with other HIV medications or to replace current medication therapy in certain people already taking HIV medications. (medlineplus.gov)
  • ACP Member Jeremy Sussman, MD, will typically adjust his statin recommendation for primary prevention based on his patient's 10-year risk estimation, encouraging use at 5% to 10% and making a stronger case as risk increases. (acpinternist.org)
  • The data support the 2019 ACC/AHA guidelines advising against the routine use of aspirin for primary prevention of ASCVD. (tctmd.com)
  • For middle-aged adults, those 40 to 70 years old, aspirin might be considered for primary prevention if they are at higher risk for CVD but do not have an excessive risk of bleeding (class IIb recommendation). (tctmd.com)
  • On the whole, though, aspirin should be used infrequently for primary prevention, according to the ACC/AHA experts. (tctmd.com)
  • Three contemporary randomized clinical trials, ASPREE , ARRIVE , and ASCEND , which were published before the new guidelines and contributed to the decision to axe aspirin in primary prevention, showed the risks of aspirin outweighed its potential benefits. (tctmd.com)
  • Erin Michos, MD (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD), one of the authors of the 2019 primary prevention guidelines, agreed that this newest study lends further support to their recommendations that aspirin not be used routinely for primary prevention. (tctmd.com)
  • Patients were divided into three groups: 11,409 patients were statin users, 4430 patients used nonstatin lipid-lowering agents, and 53,493 patients were nonusers. (medscape.com)
  • Patients taking these two medications have higher risk," said Kai Chen, an assistant professor in the Yale School of Public Health Department of Epidemiology (Environmental Health) and first author of the study. (scitechdaily.com)
  • When taken by younger people, statins were associated with an over threefold risk of a heart attack on hot days. (scitechdaily.com)
  • The Polypill idea is radical, in part because physicians generally prescribe powerful medications to healthy people only if they are at extremely high risk. (protomag.com)
  • Frankly, the lower risk you are, the more the risk of aspirin is likely to exceed the benefits," he told TCTMD. (tctmd.com)
  • We now have additional data that points out there is a real hazard and that people at low risk should not be taking aspirin. (tctmd.com)
  • For the high-risk patients, those with a 10-year risk of ASCVD exceeding 20%, aspirin should be used only "occasionally and selectively. (tctmd.com)
  • Men who took statins following their diagnosis had a 24 percent reduced risk of dying from prostate cancer and a 14 percent reduced risk of dying from any cause than men who didn't use statins. (rxwiki.com)
  • Post-diagnostic statin use was associated with a 23 percent reduced risk of distant metastasis. (rxwiki.com)
  • The main causes of excessive foot sweating include genetics, stress, certain medical conditions, and certain medications. (i99club.com)
  • This large population-based study was conducted by Oriana Yu, MD, a physician scientist at the Centre for Clinical Epidemiology of the Lady Davis Institute at the Jewish General Hospital in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, and colleagues to assess the link between statin use and prostate cancer-specific, as well as all-cause death risks. (rxwiki.com)
  • Statin use before diagnosis decreased prostate cancer-specific cancer death risks by 45 percent and all-cause death risks by 34 percent. (rxwiki.com)
  • Starting statin use only after diagnosis reduced cancer-specific death risks by 18 percent and all-cause death risks by 9 percent. (rxwiki.com)
  • Blood pressure medications. (nyp.org)
  • For people with coronary heart disease, beta-blockers are important medications that can improve survival and quality of life. (scitechdaily.com)
  • A new study published on August 1 in the journal Nature Cardiovascular Research found that, among people suffering non-fatal heart attacks associated with hot weather, an outsize portion are taking these heart medications. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Although it shows an association, the study doesn't prove that these medications caused the heart attacks, nor that they make people more vulnerable to heart attacks. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Another clue that these two medication types may render people more vulnerable: For the most part, other heart medications didn't show a connection to heat-related heart attacks. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Limited amounts of clinical data support the advantage of statins over other lipid-lowering agents on PAD outcome. (medscape.com)
  • For some patients with more severe PAD, the claudication symptoms may still cause problems in daily life, even after a few months of exercise and medications. (myperipheralarterydisease.com)
  • Built on that research, the current study examined patients' medication use prior to their heart attack. (scitechdaily.com)
  • However, this effect was stronger in patients who also used statins before diagnosis," the authors wrote. (rxwiki.com)
  • Medications including sirolimus and everolimus can slow disease progression. (wikipedia.org)
  • Non-users of those medications were not more likely to have a heart attack on hot days. (scitechdaily.com)
  • For sure, if you can improve compliance to medication, we'll have a benefit," ESC spokesperson Prof Eric Van Belle (University of Lille, France) commented to heart wire . (medscape.com)
  • Although oral medications like nitroglycerin can help relieve this, it's still unstable and could lead to a heart attack. (marijuanadoctors.com)
  • If those measures are not sufficient for glycemic control, patients may be prescribed non- insulin antihyperglycemic medications (eg, injectable glucagon -like peptide-1 [GLP-1] receptor agonists), insulin , or a combination of these medications. (msdmanuals.com)