The Borneo Post

Improving overall heart health may reduce risk of atrial fibrillati­on

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FOLLOWING Practices recommende­d for “optimal” heart health may also reduce the risk of developing a serious heart-rhythm disorder, researcher­s say.

A large US study that followed middle-aged men and women for about 25 years found that those who stuck most closely to a list of seven heart-healthy practices were over 60 per cent less likely to develop atrial fibrillati­on than those who met few or none of the list’s criteria.

Atrial fibrillati­on is the most common heart rhythm disorder in the US, affecting about two million people, the study authors note in the Journal of the American Heart Associatio­n.

“A heart rhythm disorder is something where your heartbeat is not beating regularly, so whenever your heartbeat is not beating regularly, it’s called an arrhythmia. That’s a big deal, because this arrhythmia, if untreated, can lead to stroke,” lead author Dr Parveen Garg said in a telephone interview.

“We know that atrial fibrillati­on is a growing disease . . . and unlike other cardiovasc­ular diseases, it’s not something that we’ve really targeted to try and prevent,” said Garg, a cardiologi­st with the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.

To see if an existing prevention strategy for heart disease overall would also influence who develops atrial fibrillati­on, the study team analysed data on 13,182 people and calculated their “Life’s Simple 7” scores.

This tool, developed by the American Heart Associatio­n, awards one point for performing well with regard to each of seven modifiable risk factors for heart disease: smoking, body mass index ( BMI), physical activity, diet, blood pressure, total cholestero­l and fasting blood glucose.

Participan­ts’ average age was 54 and they were free of heart disease when the study started in the 1980s. Half were followed for at least 25 years, with periodic physical testing and surveys that researcher­s used to track adherence to the Life’s Simple 7 principles.

Over time, 2,266 people, or 17 per cent, developed atrial fibrillati­on.

Compared with individual­s with the lowest scores, those with average scores were 41 per cent less likely to develop heart rhythm problems and people with optimal scores had 62 per cent lower risk. Each additional point translated to a 17 per cent lowering of risk for atrial fibrillati­on, the researcher­s calculated.

“We all know that being in perfect or ideal cardiovasc­ular health is really hard and even in our study, I think there was only three per cent of individual­s who actually had ideal health,” Garg said.

“To ask a patient who might be 50, or 60, to ask them to have perfect control of their blood pressure, and be in perfect physical shape, and have an ideal diet, that might be a bit of a stretch,” he added. “But, small improvemen­ts in . . . your health might go a long way, potentiall­y, in reducing your risk of developing this arrhythmia.”

This “very timely” study shows how risk factor modificati­on, by attacking multiple risk factors simultaneo­usly, can have a significan­t impact on the developmen­t of atrial fibrillati­on, said Dr Dawood Darbar, a cardiologi­st at the University of Illinois in Chicago and coauthor of an editorial accompanyi­ng the study.

 ??  ?? A heart rhythm disorder is something where your heartbeat is not beating regularly, so whenever your heartbeat is not beating regularly, it’s called an arrhythmia. That’s a big deal, because this arrhythmia, if untreated, can lead to stroke, lead author Dr Parveen Garg said.
A heart rhythm disorder is something where your heartbeat is not beating regularly, so whenever your heartbeat is not beating regularly, it’s called an arrhythmia. That’s a big deal, because this arrhythmia, if untreated, can lead to stroke, lead author Dr Parveen Garg said.

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