The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Monitor may predict heart attacks

- By John von Radowitz

HEART ATTACKS could be predicted days in advance in the future by using a wearable blood monitor, new research suggests.

Scientists have identif ied two biomarkers whose levels drop dramatical­ly within two weeks of a heart attack.

The discovery could lead to an early warning test that can tell heart patients when they are in danger, the researcher­s believe.

It may even be possible to create a heart attack “alarm” device that can be worn.

“Ultimately, our goal is to develop a test that predicts when a heart attack is going to occur in patients with heart disease,” said lead researcher Dr Oxana Galenko from the Intermount­ain Medical Centre Heart Institute in Salt Lake City in the United States.

“This would help physicians intervene proactivel­y and stop heart attacks from happening.

“There are monitors people wear that detect blood chemistry, and if we really wanted to look into the future, perhaps we could develop something similar.”

The biomarkers are microRNAs, small strands of genetic material that are able to switch off genes by interferin­g with the way their codes are translated.

Two of them, labelled microRNA 122 and microRNA 126, seem to disappear from the blood before a heart attack.

The scientists believe that when present, the microRNAs help to prevent heart attacks happening by blocking some unknown cardiac process.

“MicroRNAs turn things Galenko said.

“Whatever they usually turn off in people with heart disease before a heart attack isn’t being turned off when microRNA levels are reduced, which may be causing something else to be activated. “MicroRNAs act like a watchdog, and when their levels are reduced, heart disease takes a turn for the worse and heart attacks are likely to occur.”

The discovery, reported at an American College of Cardiology meeting in Washington, came after Dr Galenko’s team analysed data on 30 patients who had suffered a heart attack within 44 days of having blood samples taken.

The researcher­s looked at factors including age, gender, race, raised cholestero­l, high blood pressure and diabetes.

It was the changing levels of the microRNAs in the blood samples that stood out. Within two weeks of experienci­ng a heart attack, they plummeted.

off,” Dr

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? The Cambridges and their pet cocker spaniel, Lupo.
Picture: PA. The Cambridges and their pet cocker spaniel, Lupo.

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