CHICAGO: Paramedics armed with a cheap, three-ingredient injection
cocktail were able to reduce heart attack patients' risk of dying by 50
percent, said a US study released on Tuesday.
When the shot was given early to patients with signs of a heart attack,
the mixture of glucose, insulin and potassium, or GIK, showed remarkable
success in preventing full cardiac arrest - when the heart stops beating - and
even death.
And each shot cocktail costs only about $50, according to the research
presented at the American College of Cardiology's 61st annual scientific
meeting in Chicago.
"When started immediately in the home or on the way to the
hospital - even before the diagnosis is completely established - GIK appears to
reduce the size of heart attacks and to reduce by half the risk of having a
cardiac arrest or dying," said co-principal investigator Harry Selker.
"Because the trial is the first to show GIK is effective when used
by paramedics in real-world community settings, it could have important
implications for the treatment of heart attacks," added Selker, executive
director of the Institute for Clinical Research at Tufts Medical Centre.
Previous trials using the formula were inconclusive, possibly because
the shot was being given to patients too late, he said.
But this trial, which randomised 911 patients to receive either the
shot or a placebo and was carried out by trained paramedics in 13 cities across
the United States, showed positive effects in those who were given the
treatment.
The treatment did not prevent heart attacks from occurring, but cut the
likelihood of cardiac arrest by 50 percent over patients who did not get the
shot. The risk of immediate death also dropped by 50 percent.
The effects were visible over the month following the event as well,
with patients given the shot 40 percent less likely to die or be hospitalised
for heart failure than those who did not.
In patients with a certain kind of heart attack in which a coronary
artery becomes completely blocked, known as an ST-elevation heart attack,
immediate GIK was associated with a 60 percent reduction in cardiac arrest or
death.
Those who got GIK and were later confirmed to have had a heart attack
saw an average of two percent of their heart tissue damaged, compared to 10
percent in the placebo group.
While 23 percent of the suspected heart attacks in the study turned out
to be false alarms, patients who got the GIK shot showed no negative side
effects from the treatment.
The key difference in this trial compared to previous ones appeared to
be the act of giving the shot right away, rather than waiting for a confirmed
diagnosis at the hospital.
"We wanted to do something that is effective and can be used
anywhere," said Selker.
"More people die of heart attacks outside the hospital than inside
the hospital. Hundreds of thousands of people per year are dying out in the
community; we wanted to direct our attention to those patients."
For now, the treatment is not widely available. Further research is
planned to track the study participants over the next year and evaluate its
longer-term effects and benefits.
- AFP/de
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