Urate Lowering Therapy Could Prevent Death Associated With Cardiovascular Disease In People With Gout
Main Category: Heart DiseaseAlso Included In: Cardiovascular / Cardiology; Gout; Preventive Medicine
Article Date: 09 Nov 2010 - 2:00 PST
'Urate Lowering Therapy Could Prevent Death Associated With Cardiovascular Disease In People With Gout'
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The use of urate lowering therapy might successfully prevent death from cardiovascular disease in people with gout, according to research presented this week at the American College of Rheumatology Annual Scientific Meeting in Atlanta.
Hyperuricemia is an abnormally high level of uric acid in the blood that can lead to gout a painful and potentially disabling form of arthritis that has been recognized since ancient times. Initial symptoms of gout usually consist of intense episodes of painful swelling in single joints, most often in the feet (especially the big toe). Gout occurs when excess uric acid (a normal waste product) accumulates in the body, and needle‐like crystals deposit in the joints. This may happen because uric acid production increases or, more often, the kidneys are unable to remove uric acid from the body adequately.
Previous studies have confirmed that there is an association between elevated serum uric acid levels and cardiovascular disease. Based on this information, researchers recently evaluated whether controlling serum acid levels with urate lowering therapy drugs that also reduce gout flare ups and joint damage and deformity from gout could help prevent the development of, and death from, cardiovascular disease in people with gout.
The researchers examined medical data on 45,215 participants of whom 20,677 were men and 24,538 were women from the MJ Health Clinical Center in Taiwan, the National Health Insurance database, and the National Mortality Registry for Cardiovascular Death to look for links between high levels of uric acid, urate lowering therapies and cardiovascular disease. While completing their comparison of information, the researchers took into account a number of other factors that could contribute to the development of and death from cardiovascular disease including age, gender, high blood sugar, high blood pressure, kidney disease, heart disease, arthritis, high cholesterol, and several drugs used to treat these conditions. Additionally, they considered if a person was overweight, had a history of cigarette smoking, and his or her level of alcohol consumption, level of exercise, education, occupation and work load.
Over an average of 11.3 years follow up, 519 subjects died of cardiovascular disease, including 308 men and 211 women. Urate lowering therapy reduced the risk of cardiovascular disease by 44 percent and reduced death from a stroke by 58 percent. Urate lowering therapy was also associated with a reduction in death from hemorrhagic stroke and high blood pressure of 88 percent and 71 percent, respectively.
Additionally, these researchers found that subjects who continued treatment for hyperuricemia for more than one year had a much lower risk of developing cardiovascular disease when compared to those who had been treated for less than two months.
"There is potential benefit of urate lowering therapy on reducing total cardiovascular disease and stroke mortality," says Jiunn-Horng Chen, MD, PhD; assistant professor of medicine at China Medical University and lead investigator of the study. "Patients with hyperuricemia should be treated more aggressively and persistently than previously thought. This is not only for preventing incident gout, but also for the sake of cardiovascular disease prevention."
Patients should talk to their rheumatologists to determine their best course of treatment.
Source: American College of Rheumatology (ACR)
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posted by trev on 5 Dec 2010 at 10:03 amI drink little alcohol- certainly less than allowance listed by Gov't as acceptable.
I eat no meat yet have been plagued by High SUA and BP for years.
They are interlinked in my mind as the diuretic drug I'd taken for 10 years for Hi BP has Gout as a side effect. It's listed on the warning!
So Gretchen- I've ended up with gout and now take treatment for high SUA and urate removal by the same means. Diet and abstinence is not enough.
This a a truly valid report above and the only issue I have with it -is that it should stress this result to general medics, as they are not aware of anything Cardiovascular related, other than high BP risks and treat it, usually with diuretics.
This makes the problem worse, not better in the long run.
It's about time medics woke up to this growing scourge of hyperuricemia.
I'm really hoping against hope to sea lower SUA reduce need for BP meds -which are generally awful to live with.
Diet and Lifestyle Changes Better than Drugs
posted by Gretchen on 15 Nov 2010 at 9:04 amGout is highly correlated with high animal protein and alcohol intakes - this is well documented in the medical literature.
Rather than add a pharmaceutical drug with all their side effects a person is much better off replacing their animal proteins with plant proteins and eliminating, if possible, alcohol. Those actions alone will reduce the uric acid in the blood serum and should eliminate most if not all ofyour gout problem.
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