CardioBreak: Alcohol, Vaccines, and Peripheral Stents | Medpage Today.
Medical News
Many U.S. Workers Sacrificing Sleep for Work
“The evidence that time spent working was the most prominent sleep thief was overwhelming,” said lead author Dr. Mathias Basner, assistant professor of sleep and chronobiology in psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine in Philadelphia.
Nap anyone?
OncoBriefs: Hookah Risk
OncoBriefs: Hookah Risk, Brain Cancer, Lung Cancer.
Urinary concentration of the benzene metabolite S-phenylmercapturic acid (SPMA) was more than four times greater in hookah smokers and two times greater in people exposed to secondhand hookah smoke, when compared with people who had no exposure. The findings put a damper on enthusiasm for hookah as a safer alternative to cigarettes, as reported online in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention.
Many Statin Eligible Patients Aren’t Getting Them
JAMA – Nonobstructive Coronary Artery Disease and Risk of Myocardial Infarction
JAMA Network | JAMA | Nonobstructive Coronary Artery Disease and Risk of Myocardial Infarction.
Conclusions and Relevance In this cohort of patients undergoing elective coronary angiography, nonobstructive CAD, compared with no apparent CAD, was associated with a significantly greater 1-year risk of MI and all-cause mortality. These findings suggest clinical importance of nonobstructive CAD and warrant further investigation of interventions to improve outcomes among these patients.
What’s Your CRF? – Johns Hopkins Health Alerts
What’s Your CRF?: Johns Hopkins Health Alerts.
Johns Hopkins Health Alert
What’s Your CRF?
Engaging in regular physical activity has long been recognized as a key ingredient to a healthy heart. That’s because aerobic activities such as jogging, walking and bike riding can help improve blood circulation, insulin sensitivity and blood pressure, as well as assist in quitting smoking, maintaining a healthy weight, managing stress and warding off depression. Unfortunately, many people aren’t getting up and moving for their health.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that only about 22 percent of adults participate in regular, sustained activity (defined as the recommended five times a week for a minimum of 30 minutes), and about 25 percent of adults admit to engaging in no physical activity in their downtime.
Complicating matters is that many people may be overestimating how active they really are. In one study, British researchers report that almost half of participants deemed “inactive” inaccurately labeled themselves as “active,” making it more difficult to target these individuals for lifestyle interventions.
Putting older adults at a further disadvantage, cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) levels — essentially a measurement of your body’s ability to supply the necessary oxygen during physical activity — also tend to decrease as we age. And while CRF levels haven’t received as much attention as risk factors such as high blood pressure and high cholesterol, many experts say low CRF levels are a separate, serious risk factor for cardiovascular disease.
The numbers behind CRF. Preliminary results from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study, which looked at more than 2,600 Finnish men between the ages of 42 and 60, spell out the consequences: Those people whose CRF levels decreased more than 15 percent over a decade increased their risk of heart attack by 88 percent and faced a 122 percent increased risk of dying of any cause. Previous research found significant increases in risk as well.
So how do people know if they’re “heart fit”? In a clinical setting, CRF can be measured with simple exercise stress tests. These tests are performed with the subject either walking or running on a treadmill or pedaling a special stationary bike equipped to measure exercise output. The results are expressed in METs, or metabolic equivalents.
A study published in the New England Journal of Medicine found that the minimum output needed to preserve overall heart health was 7.9 METs. Relating to real life, that’s a 50-year-old man being able to walk continuously at a speed of 4 miles per hour during the test, and 3 miles per hour for a woman.
Posted in Heart Health on October 31, 2014
Medical Disclaimer: This information is not intended to substitute for the advice of a physician. Click here for additional information: Johns Hopkins Health Alerts Disclaimer
AAFP Member Describes His Harrowing Experience Overcoming Ebola — AAFP News — AAFP
AAFP Member Describes His Harrowing Experience Overcoming Ebola — AAFP News — AAFP.
Q & A with Kent Brantly, M.D.
21 Days – The Atlantic
Well, 12.5 percent of patients don’t run a fever. In that New England Journal of Medicine study, where they just looked at several thousand of these cases in West Africa, the lead author of the paper is adamant. He says, I sat there, I monitored this patient’s temperature myself until they died and they never ran a fever.
Very informative article on Ebola.
Fish Oil Slows Cognitive Decline, With Caveats
Fish Oil Slows Cognitive Decline, With Caveats.
Disclosures
- This study was done at Rhode Island Hospital. I have been a participant in a longitudinal weight loss study with this facility for many years.
- My son is a physician at this hospital.
- I like fish.
Alcohol Involvement in Opioid Pain Reliever and Benzodiazepine Drug Abuse–Related Emergency Department Visits and Drug-Related Deaths — United States, 2010
The analyses showed alcohol was involved in 18.5% of OPR and 27.2% of benzodiazepine drug abuse-related ED visits and 22.1% of OPR and 21.4% of benzodiazepine drug-related deaths. These findings indicate that alcohol plays a significant role in OPR and benzodiazepine abuse. Interventions to reduce the abuse of alcohol and these drugs alone and in combination are needed.
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