American Journal of Cardiology to Publish the SHAPE Task Force Report: A New Guideline for Screenin

Diseases Finder - provides A large collections of articles, books and magazines about diseases and other such illness.
American Journal of Cardiology to Publish the SHAPE Task Force Report: A New Guideline for Screenin
Author: Content Desk Distribution Service

 

Other Diseases Finder articles, tips and advise
Consume Super Foods for Super Health and Disease Prevention

World’s Longest Living Mesothelioma Survivor

Moldy Homes are a Great Investment

Lyme Disease and Your Dog - A Deadly Combination


Other health products and health services
Improve figure w/ New Curves Breast Enhancement

Is it hard to attract the opposite sex?

Get More Information on SerenitePlus Drops for Insomnia and Sleeping Disorders


Cigar, Wine, Scotch articles, tips and advise
Scholarly Wine Articles

The Pros And Cons Of Beer

Understanding a Scotch Label


(ContentDesk) July 10, 2006 -- To accelerate the adoption and standardization of heart attack screening methods, the July edition of the American Journal of Cardiology will feature a new practice guideline for screening subclinical cardiovascular disease in the asymptomatic at-risk population. Developed by the SHAPE (Screening for Heart Attack Prevention and Education) Task Force, an international contingent of leading cardiologists and researchers organized by the Association for Eradication of Heart Attack ( www.AEHA.org ), the SHAPE guideline set revolutionary standards for the careful and responsible implementation of cardiovascular imaging technologies as part of a comprehensive heart attack risk assessment and reduction strategy.The SHAPE guideline calls for non-invasive screening of all asymptomatic men between ages 45 and 75 and women between ages 55 and 75 to assess their coronary plaque buildup or carotid wall thickness. An analysis by the SHAPE Task Force estimates that screening these asymptomatic men and women could have the following potential outcomes:" Prevent more than 90,000 deaths from cardiovascular disease each year." Reduce the population with a history of heart attack  currently estimated to be 13.2 million  by as much as 25 percent." Save approximately $21.5 billion annually by saving those at highest risk, most of whom are unaware of the danger they are facing.Until SHAPE, there have been no national guidelines for screening subclinical (hidden) coronary heart disease said Dr. Morteza Naghavi, chairman of the SHAPE Task Force who founded the AEHA organization to focus on the eradication of heart attacks. We encourage hospitals, diagnostic clinics and physicians to comply with SHAPE standards and provide their patients with state-of-the-art preventive care. Heart attack and stroke account for more death and disability than all cancers combined.

Multiple screening tests are approved for subclinical cancers such as mammography and colonoscopy. However, none are approved for subclinical atherosclerosis, which underlies both heart attack and stroke. This void leaves many individuals  even those with severe atherosclerosis unaware of their risk because they have no symptoms. While nearly half of individuals who have heart attacks or sudden death dont even know they have disease, we already have treatments that could prevent a large number of these catastrophic events, said Dr. Daniel Berman, director of Cardiac Imaging at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and a member of the SHAPE Task Force Editorial Committee.

This year, more than 500,000 Americans will have a first heart attack, almost all of which are expected to come from the SHAPE eligible population. It is obvious that new strategies are needed to fight the growing epidemic of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, said Dr. Valentin Fuster, past president of the American Heart Association, and director of the Cardiovascular Institute at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York who wrote an editorial commentary in the special issue of the American College of Cardiology dedicated to the SHAPE guideline. By going beyond traditional risk assessment, the SHAPE guideline has the potential to transform the field of preventive cardiology.Relying solely on traditional risk factors to identify patients at risk for a heart attack has proven to be unsuccessful. Many physicians treat patients who have a huge amount of atherosclerotic plaques (fat buildup in the arteries) the same way they treat those with no plaques, simply because their risk factor levels (e.g.

cholesterol and blood pressure) are the same. This practice leaves the high risk patients with an imminent threat of a heart attack or stroke (the Vulnerable Patient) inadequately protected. Unfortunately, most physicians are unaware of the threat because they do not measure their patients plaque burden."Traditional risk factors play a major role in treatment for prevention of heart attack, but they fail to reliably identify individuals at risk of heart attack, which is best done through assessing the total atherosclerotic plaque volume, structure and function of the patients arteries as detailed in the SHAPE guideline, said Dr. Erling Falk, a pioneering cardiovascular pathologist from Aarhus University in Denmark who coordinated the Writing Group of the SHAPE Task Force. Atherosclerosis, a metabolic and inflammatory disease that causes plaque build up in arteries, is responsible for nearly all cases of heart attack and most cases of strokes.

Individuals with the highest degree of atherosclerotic plaque burden are described as the Vulnerable Patient. Such individuals exhibit no signs of heart disease and are not identified as very-high-risk by traditional risk factor assessment.With the publication of the SHAPE guideline, we hope to build a new momentum in cardiology that inspires physicians to use modern technologies for the prevention of heart attack, rather than using expensive technologies only to treat heart attack, which is too late and results in too little benefit to the patient, said Dr. P.K. Shah, director, Division of Cardiology at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles who led the SHAPE Task Force Editorial Committee. While a variety of new tests for the detection of atherosclerosis and abnormal arterial structure and function are emerging, the SHAPE Task Force determined that two  coronary artery calcium (CAC) measured by CT and carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT) and plaque measured by ultrasonography  currently fulfil established stringent criteria, including having: 1) abundant evidence for predictive value, 2) availability, 3) reproducibility, 4) complementary value with respect to the concept of the vulnerable patient, and/or 5) cost-effectiveness relative to the status quo.

We are far from eradicating heart attack, but SHAPE can be a major step to advance prevention in the field of cardiology, said Dr. Pamela Douglas, Professor and Chief of Cardiology at Duke University Medical Center and the immediate past president of the American College of Cardiology. What we as cardiologists practice today is mostly sick-care, the future will have to be based on health care, otherwise the wildly rising cost of medical care will bankrupt our system. The AEHA plans to proliferate SHAPE accredited clinics nationwide. The executive summary of the SHAPE guideline is available for immediate download at www.AEHA.org . The SHAPE Task Force Editorial Committee was led by Prediman K.

Shah, M.D. and included (in alphabetic order): Raymond Bahr, M.D., Daniel Berman, M.D., Roger Blumenthal, M.D., Matthew J. Budoff, M.D., Jay Cohn, M.D., Erling Falk, M.D., Ph.D., Ole Faergeman, M.D., Zahi Fayad, Ph.D., Harvey S. Hecht, M.D., Michael J. Jamieson, M.D., Wolfgang Koenig, M.D., Ph.D., Daniel Lane, M.D., Ph.D., Naghavi, John Rumberger, M.D., Ph.D.

and Allen J. Taylor, M.D.The SHAPE Task Force Writing Group was coordinated by Erling Falk, M.D., Ph.D. and included (in alphabetic order): Juhani Airaksinen, M.D., Dan Arking, Ph.D., Juan Badimon, Ph.D., Raymond Bahr, M.D., Daniel Berman, M.D., Matthew J. Budoff, M.D., Jay Cohn, M.D., Jasenka Demirovic, M.D., Ph.D., George A. Diamond, M.D., Pamela Douglas, M.D., Ole Faergeman, M.D., Zahi Fayad, Ph.D., James A.

Goldstein, M.D., Harvey S. Hecht, M.D., Victoria L.M. Herrera, M.D., Michael J Jamieson, M.D., Sanjay Kaul, M.D., M.P.H., Wolfgang Koenig, M.D., Ph.D., Robert A. Mendes, M.D., Naghavi, M.D.; Tasneem Z. Naqvi, M.D., Ward A.

Riley, Ph.D., Yoram Rudy, PhD, John Rumberger, M.D., Ph.D., Leslee Shaw, Ph.D., Robert S. Schwartz, M.D. and Arturo G. Touchard, M.D.Advisors to the SHAPE Task Force included (in alphabetic order): Arthur Agatston, M.D., Stephane Carlier, M.D., Ph.D., Raimund Erbel, M.D., Chris deKorte, Ph.D., Craig Hartley, Ph.D., Ioannis Kakadiaris, Ph.D., Roxana Mehran, M.D., Daniel O'Leary, M.D., Jan Nilsson, M.D., Gerard Pasterkamp, M.D., Ph.D., Paul Schoenhagen, M.D. and Henrik Sillesen, M.D., Ph.D.Valentin Fuster, M.D., Ph.D.

served as guest editor. Publication of the SHAPE Task Force report was funded by Pfizer Inc.About AEHAOriginated from the Texas Medical Center in Houston, the AEHA is a non-profit organization that promotes education and research related to mechanism, prevention, detection and treatment of heart attacks. The organization is committed to raising public awareness about recent revolutionary discoveries that opened exciting new avenues to prevent heart attack. The AEHA's mission is to eradicate heart attacks before the end of the century. Additional information is available on the organization's Web site at www.aeha.org ..



...
 

Other Articles: Acid Reflux, Heart, Cholesterol, Anorexia Nervosa, Disease Source, Patient's Story, Immune System

Add Your Related Site Here...
Featured Sites
Diseases Finder Posters

Related Sites
Diseases Finder Art Prints

Diseases Finder Special Resources
Allergies, Blood Disorders Cancer, Cardiovascular Disorders, Communication Disorders, Congenital Anomalies, Dental Disorders, Digestive Disorders, Endocrine Disorders, Eye Disorders, Genetic Disorders, Gynecologic Disorders, Immune Disorders, Infectious Diseases, Respiratory Disorders, Skin Disorders, Sleep Disorders
  Diseases Finder Important Resources
Diseases Finder Books
Diseases Finder DVD
Diseases Finder Softwares
Diseases Finder Magazines

Diseases Finder Resources, Diseases Finder Searches
Crohns Disease, Lyme Disease, Heart Disease, Parkinsons Disease, Alzheimers Disease, Liver Disease, Lung Disease, Kidney Disease, Gum Disease, Eye Disease, Gall Bladder Disease, Bone Disease, Blood Disease, Muscle Disease
Diseases Finder News from BBC News
  Health Update from BBC News
VIDEO: Katie Price: Implants 'need age limit'
Katie Price has told Newsnight's Jeremy Paxman she thinks breast implants should have an age limit of 21, following the health scare over implants manufactured by French firm PIP.
AUDIO: 'Wonderful' to have sight back
Katie Piper told Radio 5 live about being able to see after she was blinded in one eye after an acid attack.
AUDIO: Have views on NHS reform shifted?
Dr Michael Dixon, chair of the NHS Alliance, who supports the governments proposed reforms of the NHS and Dr John Lister, director of the Health Emergency campaign group, who opposes them, debate the Health Bill.

Take advantage of our climbing ranking, without reciprocation of links!

Diseases Finder
Maintained by: Marketer Solutions | Search Engine Marketing
2012-02-07T20:43:08-05:00