ROCKVILLE, MD — March 8, 2002 — A new study funded by the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) found that the percentage of patients with heart disease who report taking aspirin regularly increased from 59 percent to 81 percent between 1995 and 1999.
These results reflect substantial improvements in practice, but additional patients could benefit from this inexpensive, effective treatment that reduces deaths from heart disease, recurrent heart attacks, and strokes. The article is being published in the March 15 issue of the American Journal of Cardiology.
Researchers at one of seven AHRQ-supported Centers for Education and Research on Therapeutics (CERTs), the Duke University Medical Center, surveyed more than 25,000 patients from the Duke Databank for Cardiovascular Diseases. They examined trends in aspirin use, patient characteristics, and long-term outcomes for aspirin effectiveness.
Researchers found that patients who didn't take aspirin for reasons related to their heart conditions had nearly twice the risk of dying than those who took the drug regularly.
Study results show a number of clear characteristics that were predictors of aspirin use. Patients more likely to take the drug were younger males, nonsmokers, and those who had suffered prior heart attacks or undergone revascularization procedures in which clogged arteries were unblocked. Those unlikely to take aspirin regularly were patients with heart failure, diabetes, or hypertension.




תגובות רוצה להצטרף לדיון?
יש להתחבר כדי להגיב.
התחבראין תגובות עדיין. היה הראשון להגיב!