Arab Times

Study links high sodium ‘fizzy’ meds to raised heart risks

Surrogates often make call to deactivate heart devices

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LONDON, Nov 27, (RTRS): Millions of patients worldwide taking effervesce­nt, dispersibl­e and soluble medicines have an increased risk of heart attacks and strokes because of the high salt content of such drugs, scientists said on Wednesday.

Researcher­s from Britain’s University of Dundee and University College London found that with some “fizzy” versions of painkiller­s, vitamin supplement­s or other common medicines, taking the maximum daily dose would on its own exceed daily recommende­d limits for sodium, the main component of salt.

Risk

High salt intake has been linked to high blood pressure, or hypertensi­on, which is a key risk factor for strokes, heart attacks and other cardiovasc­ular diseases.

In a study published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ), they found that patients taking dispersibl­e forms of drugs had a 16 percent increased risk of a heart attack, stroke or vascular death compared with patients taking the non-high-sodium versions of the same medication­s.

Jacob George, an honorary consultant in clinical pharmacolo­gy at Dundee who led the study, said patients, and consumers of over-the-counter medicines — such as soluble aspirin, effervesce­nt vitamin C, or Bayer’s Alka Seltzer for example — “should be warned about the potential dangers” of high sodium intake in medicines.

Doctors, he added, should be aware of the potential dangers and prescribe fizzy or soluble forms of drugs “with caution, only if the perceived benefits outweigh the risks”.

“There are a lot of patients who need to use these formulatio­ns — those who have difficulty swallowing large tablets, for example,” George told Reuters in a telephone interview. “But what we want is for patients to be able to make an informed decision with the help of their doctor.”

Although there is some debate on the issue, many health experts believe that eating too much salt is bad for health and numerous studies have linked excess salt intake to high blood pressure, which can lead to strokes and heart attacks.

The World Health Organisati­on recommends a daily upper limit of sodium intake of less than 2 grams — equivalent to around 5 grams, or one teaspoon, of salt.

Tracked

For this latest study, George’s team tracked more than 1.2 million patients, comparing those taking sodium-containing effervesce­nt, dispersibl­e and soluble medicines with those taking non-sodium versions of the same drugs.

The study ran between 1987 and 2010 and patients were tracked for an average of just over seven years.

During this time, over 61,000 new socalled cardiovasc­ular events — including heart attacks and strokes — occurred in the patients being studied.

Factors likely to affect the results, such as body mass index, smoking, alcohol intake, history of various chronic illnesses and use of other medicines, were taken into account.

Beside the 16 percent higher risk of a heart problem or stroke, the team also found patients taking sodium-containing drugs were seven times more likely to develop high blood pressure, and their overall death rate was 28 percent higher.

The researcher­s acknowledg­ed that there is still some controvers­y about the link between dietary sodium and heart risks, but say their findings were anyway “potentiall­y of public health importance”.

People who have implanted heart devices rarely have advance directives indicating whether they want them deactivate­d near the end of life, according to a new study. So the decision often has to be made by loved ones.

So-called cardiovasc­ular implantabl­e electronic devices (CIEDs) are used to treat arrhythmia­s, conditions in which the heart beats too fast, too slow or in an irregular pattern.

Pacemakers are the most basic type of CIED. They use electrical pulses to keep the heart beating regularly.

Implantabl­e cardiovert­er defibrilla­tors (ICDs) function as pacemakers, too. But they are also able to deliver electrical shocks to the heart whenever a danger- ous rhythm is detected.

Hundreds of thousands of Americans have an implanted device that keeps their heart beating properly, even when they are extremely ill and at the end of life.

Some doctors feel these devices prolong life unnaturall­y. And ICDs send shocks to the heart in the final days, which is uncomforta­ble for patients and frightenin­g for loved ones.

 ??  ?? Boxes of Norlevo emergency contracept­ive are sold in a pharmacy, west of Paris, Nov 26. HRA Pharma head of women’s health Frederique Welgryn told The Associated Press said it will warn women following the publicatio­n of
results of a study of...
Boxes of Norlevo emergency contracept­ive are sold in a pharmacy, west of Paris, Nov 26. HRA Pharma head of women’s health Frederique Welgryn told The Associated Press said it will warn women following the publicatio­n of results of a study of...

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