WASHINGTON:
A test to measure the heart's electrical
activity could help predict future heart attacks in otherwise healthy adults
over 70, said a US study on Tuesday.
Researchers
followed 2,192 healthy adults aged 70-79 for a period of eight years, according
to the study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The
subjects started the study by getting an electrocardiogram, often called an EKG
or ECG, which measures the heart's overall health.
People
who showed abnormalities in their EKGs saw a higher risk of heart disease over
the course of the study than people whose EKGs were normal, even after
researchers adjusted for risk factors like diabetes and high cholesterol.
Those
who had minor abnormalities show up on their first test had a 35 per cent
higher risk of heart attack, while those with major abnormalities had a 51 per
cent increased risk, said the findings.
"This
research is taking the information from an EKG and adding it to other
traditional risk factors to better predict who is going to have a heart
attack," said co-author Douglas Bauer, director of the University of
California San Francisco Division of General Internal Medicine Research
Program.
However,
organizations such as the American Academy of Family Physicians do not back
routine use of EKGs for cardiac screening in low-risk patients, citing high
costs and a lack of evidence that the test would improve health outcomes.
"For
the time being, in the absence of clear evidence of benefit and no clear
implications for costs, the best advice is not to perform ECGs in asymptomatic
patients, regardless of age," said an accompanying editorial by Philip
Greenland of the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
"However,
a careful and detailed cost-effectiveness analysis would be a useful next step
in the translation of the cumulative risk information into an evidence-based
practice recommendation."
Heart
disease is the leading killer in the United States, and accounts for one in
three deaths, according to the American Heart Association.
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AFP/fa
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