Mayo Clinic identifies new risk factor for heart attack patients

Nov 05, 2007

If you go to the hospital within one to two hours of the onset of symptoms of a heart attack, your chances of getting proper treatment are nearly 70 percent greater than those who wait 11 to 12 hours before seeking treatment, according to results presented today at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2007 in Orlando, Fla.

“This research should emphasize to patients that getting help immediately, by calling 911, gives them the best chance of receiving treatments we know can help save their lives or lessen the damage to their hearts,” says Henry Ting, M.D., lead Mayo Clinic cardiovascular researcher on the national study. “If patients wait at home for hours with symptoms and come in later, unfortunately they aren’t getting the proper treatments.”

The most serious type of heart attack is known as an ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). In a STEMI, critical arteries supplying the heart with blood are blocked. Previous studies have shown that the best treatment for STEMI patients is reperfusion therapy -- when a patient’s blocked artery is opened by inflating a balloon at the site of the blockage or by delivering clot-dissolving medication, thus restoring blood flow to heart muscle.

The study is the largest and most detailed review of multiple elements in patient records contained in a national heart attack database. These elements are: time delay from onset of symptoms to hospital arrival; treatment with reperfusion; and treatment outcome. After analyzing 440,398 heart attack incidents from 1995 to 2004 in the National Registry of Myocardial Infarction, the researchers identify for the first time a novel risk factor for heart attack deaths that appears to have a readily available solution: comply with the American Heart Association/American Cardiology Association guidelines now in place. The guidelines state that if a patient has symptoms consistent with a heart attack which are not relieved after five minutes, or after placing one nitroglycerin pill under the tongue, the patient should call 911.

The records that the team reviewed document how long it took for 440,398 heart attack patients to arrive at the hospital after their symptoms started, and correlate arrival time with the rates of reperfusion therapy they received upon arriving at the hospital.

Results show that:

-- Of patients who arrived at the hospital within one to two hours of onset of heart attack, 77 percent received reperfusion therapy.

-- Of patients who arrived at the hospital within two to three hours of onset of heart attack, 73 percent received reperfusion therapy.

-- Of patients who arrived at the hospital within 11 to 12 hours of onset of heart attack, only 46 percent of patients received reperfusion therapy.

“Although current guidelines recommend that STEMI patients who reach the hospital within 12 hours after their symptoms started should receive reperfusion therapy, we found that this is not happening,” Dr. Ting says. “These delays represent a novel and modifiable risk factor and warrant further investigation. These results show that gaps remain in quality of care in patients with STEMI -- first, we need to encourage patients with potential heart attacks to come to the hospital as early as possible; second, hospitals need to implement systems that treat all eligible patients rapidly regardless of the delay in presentation.”

Source: Mayo Clinic

Explore further: Estrogen a new weapon against urinary tract infection in menopause

add to favorites email to friend print save as pdf

Related Stories

How nanotechnology could keep your heart healthy

May 17, 2013

Since the heart is such a delicate and critical organ, clinicians usually opt not to intervene with the dead cells that remain after a heart attack or cardiac disease. "But we think that all heart attacks deserve some kind ...

Biologists decode turtle genome

Apr 23, 2013

A group of 50 researchers from around the globe, including biology professors Daniel Warren, Ph.D., from Saint Louis University and Leslie Buck, Ph.D., from the University of Toronto, have spent the last ...

Getting under the shell of the turtle genome

Mar 27, 2013

Scientists have decoded the genome of the western painted turtle (Chrysemys picta bellii) , one of the most abundant turtles on Earth, finding clues to their longevity and ability to survive without oxygen ...

Recommended for you

User comments : 0

More news stories

Panic over MERS virus fades in Saudi

People in Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province have again started greeting friends with the traditional kiss on the cheek, and face masks in public are becoming rarer, as panic subsides over the outbreak of a deadly respiratory ...

French firemen test hypnosis to help victims

"Look me straight in the eye. Your mind is emptying, your body is relaxing," says the fireman, using the calming words of hypnosis to help a trauma victim—a technique being pioneered by fire crews in the eastern French ...

Dusty surprise around giant black hole

(Phys.org) —ESO's Very Large Telescope Interferometer has gathered the most detailed observations ever of the dust around the huge black hole at the centre of an active galaxy. Rather than finding all of ...

How do bees make honey? It's not just bee barf

(Phys.org) —Last weekend, my daughter asked me how bees made honey, and I realized that I didn't know the answer. How do bees make honey? I did some homework, and can now explain it to her – and to you.

Taiwan's Hon Hai to hire 3,000 after Mozilla tie-up

Taiwan's Hon Hai Precision said Thursday it aims to hire up to 3,000 new employees to develop devices and software for Mozilla's Firefox operating system as it seeks to diversify from its core manufacturing services.