A new study, done at the University Hospitals Harrington Heart & Vascular Institute, has found a link between IBD and the development of heart disease and an increased risk of heart attack. The basis for the study was the long-standing belief that the development of heart disease is linked to increased inflammation. The study looked at over 22 million patients over the course of three years.
The researchers found that heart attacks were almost twice as frequent in patients suffering from a chronic inflammatory condition affecting the gastrointestinal tract. These results may be linked to the increased prevalence of risk factors related to heart attacks in patients with IBD, including high blood pressure, diabetes, and smoking. After accounting for these factors, as well as age, sex, and race, the researchers found that patients with IBD had a 23 percent higher chance of having a heart attack than patients without IBD.
The highest risk category for heart attacks was discovered to be female patients with IBD who were less than 40 years old. IBD is generally diagnosed between the ages of 15 and 30. Being female and being diagnosed with IBD at a young age was associated with increased levels of inflammation than in older IBD patients. IDB is also believed to be much more aggressive in these conditions.
Dr. Muhammad Panhwar, one of the researchers responsible for the study, was quoted as saying, “The disproportionately increased levels of inflammation in younger patients who may not otherwise have the traditional heart disease risk factors may explain the increased risk seen in these patients. Given that over 3 million people (around 1.2 percent of the population) in the United States suffer from IBD, a large number of them may have heart disease that has gone under the radar. Our hope is that our study encourages more clinicians to screen these patients more aggressively for heart disease.”
Assistant Professor of Medicine at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Dr. Mahazarin Ginwalla, was quoted as saying, “Our study adds considerably to a growing set of literature highlighting the chronic inflammation in IBD as having a role in the development of cardiovascular disease. Clinicians who care for patients with traditional cardiovascular risk factors who also have IBD should recognize IBD as a cardiovascular risk factor as well and treat it appropriately.”
One major takeaway from the study is the particular group of IBD patients who are most at risk: younger women. Additional research is needed to be certain exactly what causes this special group to be at a higher risk, but hopefully, this will lead to more thorough screening processes for heart disease in these patients, who may otherwise be overlooked as lacking the traditional risk factors it is associated with.
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