The
findings are to be presented at this week´s American College of Cardiology
conference in Orlando (Ian Nicholson/PA)
|
Patients who go into
hospital with common respiratory or urinary tract infections are more likely to
suffer heart attacks or strokes, according to a new UK study.
Press
Association report continues:
Researchers
from Birmingham’s Aston University looked at data from 34,027 patients who were
treated for common respiratory or urinary tract infections – which could range
from nose, throat, lung and kidney to bladder infections.
They
found that after successful treatment for their infections, they were 40% more
likely to suffer heart disease and 150% more likely to have a stroke.
The
findings, which are to be presented at this week’s American College of
Cardiology conference in Orlando, are drawn from a study which looked at 14
years of data from 1.2 million patients.
From
this information, the researchers compared 34,027 patients who had been
admitted with a urinary or respiratory tract infection with an age and
sex-matched control group without infection.
Cardiologist
Dr Rahul Potluri, an expert in big data medical research at Aston University,
said: “It is notable that infection appears to confer as much, if not more, of
a risk for future heart disease and stroke as very well established risk
factors such as high blood pressure and diabetes.
“Although
inflammation has been linked to atherosclerosis (the build-up of fatty material
inside your arteries), this is the largest study to show that common infection
is such a significant risk factor.”
Factors
such as age, gender, ethnicity, obesity and tobacco use which are known to
increase the risk of heart disease and stroke were noted along with medical
conditions including excess cholesterol, high blood pressure, diabetes and
kidney disease, heart failure and atrial fibrillation.
The
effects of infection were of similar magnitude to diabetes, hypertension and
cholesterol – and more than obesity, according to the study.
Dr Potluri said: “Our figures suggest that those who are admitted to hospital with a respiratory or urinary tract infection are 40% more likely to suffer a subsequent heart attack, and 2.5 times more likely to have a stroke, than patients who have had no such infection – and are considerably less likely to survive from these conditions.”
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