Gulf Today

Hospital releases report on CAD patients

- Mariecar Jara-puyod, Senior Reporter

Says majority of the younger segment of expats living in the UAE appear to be increasing­ly prone to coronary artery disease (CAD) due to a number of reasons

Heart patients, specifical­ly the coronary artery disease (CAD) sufferers, continuall­y become younger, according to a one-year record of cardiac emergency procedures conducted at a catherizat­ion laboratory (Cath Lab) in one of the private hospitals in Dubai.

As explained in the “Coronary Heart Disease Burden” section of “The Atlas of Heart Disease and Stroke” of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), CAD is similar to cardiovasc­ular diseases. Two of their signs and symptoms are chest pain (angina) and heart atack (myocardial infarction) that happen because “the blood vessels supplying the heart muscles become blocked, starving it of oxygen, leading to the heart muscle’s failure or death.”

The observatio­nal report on the young CAD patients was released on Monday.

A subsequent email interview with Aster Hospital-mankhool specialist Interventi­onal Cardiology Dr. Naveed Ahmed had revealed that a 23-year-old man was the youngest among the 1,000 cardiac patients the Cath Lab team had atended to since the inaugurati­on on July 22, 2018.

From the 1,000 were “an average two to three heart atack patients every day in addition to up to 50 patients referred every month for angiogram from clinics on an elective basis for chest pain associated with a positive treadmill test suggesting blockage in the blood supply to the heart.”

The 23-year-old patient was a “non-smoker, non-diabetic and non-hypertensi­ve but with a strong family history of CAD.”

In the report, consultant Interventi­onal Cardiology Dr. Amal Louis said “majority of them (belong to the) younger segment of expatriate­s living in the UAE who appear to be increasing­ly prone to CAD due to a number of reasons and they get it at a much earlier age than observed in the rest of the world.”

Ahmed said majority of the July 2018 to July 2019 Cath Lab patients were from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and the Philippine­s, between 30 and 40 years old: “A good number were in their late 20s.”

A Cath Lab is a highly-specialize­d room equipped with a technologi­cally-advanced imaging equipment that assists doctors in performing minimal invasive tests and procedures on cardiac patients.

Louis said heart atack patients are taken to the Cath Lab for the required surgery such as angioplast­y and stenting “when an artery has 100 per cent blockage: “This procedure, when done early on an emergency basis on patients with a major heart atack, has proved to save lives at a higher rate.”

Ahmed said, “Angiogram is a procedure done by using a small tube through a patient’s wrist or leg. The heart arteries can be visualized by injecting a dye, so any blockage can be identified early and treated to prevent heart atacks. Now, even heart valves can be replaced in a Cath Lab without open surgery.”

On the Orbital Artherecto­my technique, this “cracks” the hardened calcified vessels—atheroscle­rosis—a consequenc­e of the hard cholestero­l substances stored within the coronary arteries.

This novel technique is the best option compared to bypass surgery and angioplast­y, “the results were short-lived, and patients had significan­t complicati­ons.”

The one-year 1,000 cases observatio­nal report magnified the June to mid-september 2018 clinical data of the hospital known as the “Heart Disease Striking Indian Expats Younger Than Ever Data.”

It comprised of 142 Cath Lab patients: 94 Indians, 20 Pakistanis, 11 Bangladesh­is, nine Filipinos and the Egyptians, British, Sri Lankan, Serbian, Nigerian and Nepalese at one each.

The age of the “first-time heart atack victims” were 81 45 to 60-year-old, 45 below 45 years old, 16 over 61 years old, and 106 under 55 years old.

The average age of Filipinos was younger than 45, majority of whom were heavy smoking women.

 ?? WAM ?? ↑ Zaki Nusseibeh, Minister of State, with Patrizio Fondi, head of the EU delegation to the UAE, at the headquarte­rs of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, on Tuesday.
WAM ↑ Zaki Nusseibeh, Minister of State, with Patrizio Fondi, head of the EU delegation to the UAE, at the headquarte­rs of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, on Tuesday.

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