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Seeing Your Own Clogged Arteries Can Spur Change

Group shown images more likely to stop smoking, eat healthier foods and take meds, study found
Seeing images of their narrowed heart arteries may convince some heart disease patients to adopt a healthier lifestyle and take prescribed medications, a new study suggests.

"Seeing their calcified coronary arteries on the CT image was clearly an eye-opener for patients. We received comments such as, 'It is my coronary artery and my coronary artery calcification and I am facing a real risk and challenge,' " said study author Rikke Elmose Mols, a nurse and Ph.D. student at Aarhus University Hospital-Skejby in Denmark.


"This may be the wake-up call patients need to take their medication and modify their behaviors to reduce their risk of having a coronary artery event," Mols said in a European Society of Cardiology news release.


The research included 189 people recently diagnosed with early stage heart disease. Half were shown a CT image of calcium buildup on the walls of their heart arteries, a condition called coronary artery calcification.

 

In addition, a nurse told the patients about the link between coronary artery calcification and the increased risk of heart problems, and gave them advice about a healthy diet, exercise, quitting smoking, controlling blood pressure and taking aspirin and cholesterol-lowering statin drugs.


The other half of participants did not see images of their scans and were given standard follow-up, which included advice on reducing lifestyle and risk factors for heart disease.


The patients who saw the images of their narrowed heart arteries were more likely to switch to a healthier diet, lose weight and stop smoking. They were also more likely to continue taking statins, which led to lower cholesterol levels.


For example, just 9 percent of people who saw their arteries continued to smoke compared to 22 percent of the group given standard treatment. And just 44 percent of those who saw their blood vessels continued to eat unhealthy foods versus 64 percent of those in the usual care group.


"The results of our study suggest that visualizing their health threat motivates patients to make changes to reduce their risk. A large-scale study is needed to confirm the findings and to determine the cost-effectiveness of implementing this intervention in clinical practice," Mols said.


The study was to be presented June 15 at a European Society of Cardiology meeting in Dubrovnik, Croatia. Findings presented at meetings are generally viewed as preliminary until they've been published in a peer-reviewed journal.

 

(From www.webmd.com)



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