The Freeman

HIV infection linked to heart attack risk

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WASHINGTON — Being HIV-positive raises a person's heart attack risk by about 50 percent, said a study released that confirms earlier findings.

The study looked at 82,459 US veterans, the vast majority of them men. It was published in Archives of Internal Medicine, a publicatio­n of the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

It said that in three age groups, the average incidence of heart attack was consistent­ly and significan­tly higher for people who are HIV-positive, compared to uninfected veterans.

After adjusting for illness, smoking, alcohol consumptio­n and risk factors such as high blood pressure and cholestero­l, the HIV-positive subjects in the study had a 50 percent higher risk of heart attack than uninfected people.

The research was led by Matthew Freiberg of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

Several studies have shown that chronic activation of the immune system because of HIV infection prior to antiretrov­iral therapy seems to cause inflammati­on that apparently speeds up the aging process and leaves a person more vulnerable to illnesses associated with growing older.

A study published in July by the JAMA showed that people who are HIV-positive have twice the risk of heart attack or stroke compared to uninfected people. The authors of that study linked this increased risk to inflammati­on of the arteries.

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