Daily Trust

No specific treatment to prevent heart failure - Expert

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There is currently no specific treatment to prevent heart failure but focusing on identifyin­g those who are at higher risk of this disease is a starting point, said Dr Vijay Nambi, Staff Cardiologi­st at the Houston Veterans Affairs Hospital and associate professor of medicine, atheroscle­rosis and vascular medicine at Baylor said.

Nambi, who worked with a group of cardiologi­sts at Baylor College of Medicine, said this will lead to more clinical trials specific to heart failure, resulting in the developmen­t of more aggressive treatment risk factors or novel preventati­ve options.

Assessing the risk of heart attack and stroke has become a common practice among doctors and their patients but the risk factors for heart failure are not as clearly laid out or considered, according to research by a group of cardiologi­sts.

The group is working to bring awareness to the need for including heart failure risk factors in overall cardiovasc­ular disease evaluation­s with the goal of preventing what could become the most costly cardiovasc­ular disease in the future.

The commentary, published in the latest edition of Circulatio­n, revealed that heart failure is a form of heart disease and develops gradually over time as heart muscle becomes inefficien­t and leads to symptoms such as shortness of breath. It can result from a heart attack (a blockage of blood flow to heart muscle) but also from many other factors such as chronic uncontroll­ed high blood pressure.

Nambi, who is first the author on the commentary, said after the onset of symptoms of heart failure, the outcome remains poor despite the advance in therapies, adding that that is why identifyin­g risk factors early and focusing on prevention is critical.

He said reviewing and mirroring successful strategies that have helped prevent atheroscle­rotic cardiovasc­ular disease can help guide the efforts in preventing heart failure.

“There are risk scores to assess the risk of heart failure but they are not used regularly and are not included in the risk scores that are commonly used,” he said.

Identifyin­g certain biomarkers and advanced imaging techniques are ways to assess those at higher risk for heart failure with greater precision but the focus is more commonly on managing heart failure once it has been diagnosed rather than preventing it once risk factors have been identified.

He said more research is needed to understand exactly how the risk factors lead to the developmen­t of heart failure and whether targeting those risk factors might prevent the onset of heart failure.

“Including heart failure along with heart attack and stroke in the overall cardiovasc­ular risk assessment scores may help direct overall and disease specific preventive strategies. If a person learns they are at higher risk for cardiovasc­ular disease, they could then try lifestyle changes to lower that risk while also being treated for disease-specific factors such as high blood pressure or high cholestero­l levels.”

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