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Contact: cfeheley@acc.org;
800-253-4636; 301-581-3425
July 8, 2004
New
guidelines emphasize need for speed when chest pain strikes
(DALLAS and BETHESDA, Md.)If your chest pain worsens
and lasts more than five minutes, especially if you’re
short of breath, feel weak, nauseated or lightheaded, call
9-1-1—you could be having a heart attack.
That’s
one of several recommendations of the new American College
of Cardiology/American Heart Association Guidelines for treating
heart attacks.
The
new guidelines detail the best way for physicians to manage
patients with ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI),
a severe heart attack in which an artery is completely blocked.
They are published today at www.americanheart.org
and www.acc.org.
They will appear in the August 3 rapid access issue of Circulation:
Journal of the American Heart Association, and the August
4 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
Each
year an estimated 500,000 Americans have a STEMI. Treating
this type of heart attack requires fast action because if
blood flow is not restored to the heart within 20 minutes
permanent damage will occur, said Elliott M. Antman, M.D.,
professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and director
of the Samuel A. Levine Cardiac Unit at Brigham and Women’s
Hospital in Boston. While some heart muscle can be saved if
patients are treated later, more of it is lost with every
minute treatment is delayed.
Speedy
treatment not only means the difference between life and death,
but also between disability and a return to an active lifestyle
after a heart attack.
“The
message that we are trying to get across to patients is this:
They need to enter the medical system much more rapidly than
they are currently,” said Antman, who chaired the writing
committee and the ACC/AHA task force that drafted the new
practice guidelines.
Many
patients say they delay seeking treatment because “they’re
embarrassed; they worry that they are crying wolf” because
the symptoms may be caused by indigestion or other non-heart
attack conditions.
“It
is not unusual for patients to wait two hours or longer before
seeking treatment when they should get help as quickly as
possible to minimize damage to their hearts,” he said.
“Women in particular delay longer because many still
adhere to a message of the past identifying men as those primarily
at risk for heart attacks.”
Other
heart attack symptoms include chest discomfort with or without
radiation to the arms, back, neck, jaw or stomach, and excessive
sweating. The new guidelines also help make it easier to determine
treatment.
Antman
said earlier guidelines weren’t always helpful to physicians
who needed to make fast decisions about treatment. The new
guidelines have been organized so that all medical personnel—emergency
medical technicians who are first on the scene, emergency
department staff, and the cardiologists treating the patients—can
quickly identify the most appropriate treatments.
For
example, one of the most crucial decisions when treating heart
attack patients is whether to open the blocked artery with
a clot-busting drug or by using tiny flexible tubes called
stents that prop open blocked arteries. The new guidelines
distill this decision to four issues:
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How much time has passed since the onset of symptoms?
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How great is the risk of dying?
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How great is the risk of bleeding in the brain if clot-busting
drugs are used?
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Realistically, how much time will it take to get the patient
into a cardiac catheterization lab for stenting?
The
guidelines also include clear instructions about medical treatments
after heart attack. For example, the guidelines recommend
that patients should take aspirin daily and receive beta-blockers
(to reduce the risk of irregular heart rhythm) after heart
attack.
“We
also strongly endorse the use of angiotensin-converting enzyme
(ACE) inhibitors for all patients to improve heart function,”
Antman said. “For those patients who cannot tolerate
an ACE inhibitor, we suggest an angiotensin receptor blocker
(ARB).”
The
new guidelines also recommend that heart attack patients with
levels of “bad” low-density lipoprotein cholesterol
(LDL) of 100 milligrams per deciliter (mg/dL) or higher receive
cholesterol-lowering statin drugs upon hospital discharge.
The goals should be to reduce LDL to “substantially
less” than 100 mg/dL.
“This
is more aggressive than the original ATP III goal recommended
by the National Cholesterol Education Panel,” said Sidney
C. Smith Jr., M.D., co-chair of the joint task force and past-president
of the American Heart Association. “Based on the results
of large clinical trials of statin drugs, we’re finding
that the lower the LDL, the better. This change in practice
could significantly improve outcomes for patients recovering
from heart attack.”
Writing
committee members also include Daniel T. Anbe, M.D.; Paul
Wayne Armstrong, M.D.; Eric R. Bates, M.D.; Lee A. Green,
M.D., M.P.H.; Mary Hand, M.S.P.H., R.N.; Judith S. Hochman,
M.D.; Harlan M. Krumholz, M.D.; Frederick G. Kushner, M.D.;
Gervasio A. Lamas, M.D.; Charles J. Mullany, M.B., M.S.; Joseph
P. Ornato, M.D.; David L. Pearle, M.D.; and Michael A. Sloan,
M.D.
The
American College of Cardiology, a 30,000-member nonprofit
professional medical society and teaching institution, is
dedicated to fostering optimal cardiovascular care and disease
prevention through professional education, promotion of research,
leadership in the development of standards and guidelines,
and the formulation of health care policy.
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