JOIN VT | NEWSLETTER
VETERANS TODAY ON : FACEBOOK | TWITTER | FORUM
|

VA Study Shows Beta-Blockers Linked to Heart Attacks After Surgery

VA STUDY SHOWS COMMONLY-USED BETA-BLOCKERS LINKED TO HEART ATTACKS AFTER SURGERY
  
Beta-blockers linked to heart attacks after surgery

by Elizabeth Cooney

Patients who were taking drugs to lower their blood pressure before, during, and after operations unrelated to their hearts had higher rates of heart attacks and death than similar patients who were not taking the drugs, a study shows. The new findings add to an already complex picture of the best way to protect patients from heart complications after non-cardiac surgery.

A team led by Dr. Haytham M. S. Kaafarani and Dr. Kamal M.F. Itani of the Veterans Affairs Boston Health Care System reports in the Archives of Surgery on patients who took beta-blockers such as atenolol or metoprolol around the time that they had surgery at a Houston VA hospital in 2000.

Preventing cardiac complications in patients with coronary artery disease or risk factors for it has been the focus of intense research, they write, and guidelines from the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association recommend beta-blockers for high-risk patients having surgery, particularly vascular procedures. The authors set out to explore the effect of beta-blockers among patients at all levels of cardiac risk.

     

Reviewing the records of more than 1,200 patients who had vascular surgery, hernia repair, orthopedic procedures, or other kinds of surgery, the researchers ranked the patients as at low, intermediate, or high risk of heart problems. They also noted their heart rates before and after surgery, based on previous work in the field showing that an elevated heart rate preceded stroke, heart attack, and death.

Among the 238 patients in the retrospective study who were already taking beta-blockers or who received them around the time of their surgery, there was a higher rate of heart attacks and death – 2.94 percent compared with 0.74 percent — in the 30 days after surgery than among the 408 patients in a control group matched by age, sex, heart or procedure risk, smoking status, and kidney health. None of the patients who died had been classified as at high risk.

The patients who took beta-blockers and later died had higher heart rates before surgery – 86 compared to 70 beats per minute — than the patients on beta-blockers who survived. The differences in the death rate disappeared by one year after surgery.

The study raises questions about the safety of using beta-blockers in low-risk or intermediate-risk patients, the authors say. They also suggest that achieving a low heart rate before surgery may be essential for beta-blockers to protect against heart attacks.

“Our study adds to the controversy regarding the optimal use of perioperative beta-blockers in patient populations at various levels of cardiac risk,” they write. “Overall, our data found worse perioperative cardiovascular outcome and worse overall mortality associated with the use of beta-blockers.”

In a critique appearing with the article, Dr. Todd E. Rasmussen of Wilford Hall US Air Force Hospital in San Antonio, Texas, wonders whether taking beta-blockers is a sign of being at risk for heart complications, including death. He also questions how the patients were stratified according to their cardiac risk.

"It is conceivable, if not likely, that patients in the beta-blocker group were indeed at higher risk, having been identified as candidates for beta-blocker therapy," he writes. "Despite these limitations, the authors are to be commended for a significant undertaking and an insightful study. I would encourage them now to turn their energy and expertise to a contemporary cohort using more powerful and complete methods."


Related Posts:

  • No Related Posts

Short URL: http://www.veteranstoday.com/?p=3820

The views expressed herein are the views of the author exclusively and not necessarily the views of VT or any other VT authors, affiliates, advertisers, sponsors or partners. Legal Notice

Posted by on Oct 21 2008, With 0 Reads, Filed under Health. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
Apply for VA Loan Now Advertisement Get Educated at Excelsior College Get Educated at Excelsior College Get Your Loan Now Get Your Loan Now Get Your Loan Now Apply for your VA Home Loan Now Apply for your VA Home Loan Now Apply for your VA Home Loan Now Apply for Jobs on HireVeterans.com Now Apply for Jobs on HireVeterans.com Now Apply for Jobs on HireVeterans.com Now Become a Consultant

COMMENTS

To post, we ask that you login using Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, or Hotmail in the box below.
Don't have a social network account? Register and Login direct with VT and post.
Before you post, read our Comment Policy - Feedback


Comments Closed

Comments are closed

 

Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Join Our Daily Newsletter
  View Newsletter ARCHIVE

WHAT'S HOT

  1. Will the Media Report If Obama is Assissinated by Mossad?
  2. No News, Nothing to Write About, Thank You
  3. Now Britain Helps the Water Thieves
  4. Abortion – Contraception as Political Issues is Slick Luciferian Move
  5. Syria’s Bloody CIA Revolution – A Distraction?
  6. NATO’s Secret War on Syria
  7. Iran War: What Is AIPAC Planning?
  8. Former Prisoners of War – You Are Not Forgotten
  9. Veterans Encouraged to Sign Up For Creative Arts Competition
  10. Egypt Military Rejects US Threats and Braces for General Strike
  11. Top 10 Veterans Stories in Today’s News – February 10, 2012
  12. Did JFK Nail an Intern a Day, Ask the GOP
  13. Veterans File for Class Certification in Chemical, Biological Weapons Testing Case
  14. Act Up Against ACTA
  15. The 2012 Voting Experience – The Most Important of a Lifetime
  16. NATO Killed Children in Afghanistan
  17. DOD Opens More Jobs, Assignments to Military Women
  18. Media Whore Awards Show; The Nominees Are:
  19. Militia Group Finally Going to Trial
  20. U.S. Department of Defense Contract Awards for Feb. 09, 2012
  1. judgment: Fully agree Betty McCollum has unusual courage and we should give her some visibility. If we want to change...
  2. LOB2065: I am against the production of GMO foods and the corruption that goes along with it and I am against...
  3. LOB2065: We are not in a world that shares, we are in a world where those with the most money get what they want....
  4. Ann: Not sure where we agree, but when you cited Catholics, Christians, etc., several times at the crux of the matter...
  5. Ann: You are really obsessed with all those Africans and Asians having babies and getting access to food, and even...


Apply for VA Home Loan Now!



SubscribeVT Radio Home Page







Archives