AP/ February 18, 2010, 8:38 AM

Some Heart Patients Undoing Drug Benefits

European heart patients are taking more medication than ever before to lower their blood pressure and cholesterol, but bad habits such as overeating and smoking are undermining the drugs, a new study says.

Despite big increases in heart patients on medication, most still have high blood pressure and nearly half have high cholesterol.

Researchers interviewed more than 8,500 patients in eight countries. Patients were on average about 60 years old, and had a history of heart problems.

The experts found that more young patients are smoking, and more patients are fatter and diabetic compared with similar groups from 12 years ago.

The study was published Friday in the medical journal, Lancet.

"In terms of the lifestyles of patients with coronary disease, everything is moving in the wrong direction," said Dr. David Wood, one of the paper's authors and a professor of cardiovascular medicine at Imperial College in London.

The study was supported by the European Society of Cardiology and paid for by pharmaceutical companies that make heart drugs.

Researchers also found that the numbers of patients taking drugs to lower their cholesterol was seven times higher in 2006-2007 than in 1995-1996. About 43 percent of patients still had high cholesterol.

And while more people now take medications to lower their blood pressure, Wood said that hadn't made any difference. "The response of physicians is just to give more and more drugs, but what we need is a comprehensive lifestyle program."

Experts said trends were similar in the United States.

"Even if we advise patients to lose weight, they have to walk out the door and do that themselves," said Dr. Alfred Bove, incoming president of the American College of Cardiology.

Bove, who was not linked to the study, said more patients were now being treated for high blood pressure, but millions were unaware they even had a problem.

In the last decade, deaths due to heart disease have dropped by about 30 percent in the United States and 45 percent in Britain. But the rates are leveling off, and experts worry the surge in obesity and diabetes will reverse previous successes.

Even with advances such as medications, heart stents and angioplasties, Dr. Daniel Jones, a past president of the American Heart Association, said that fighting heart disease "is like swimming upstream."

Jones, who was not connected to the Lancet study, warned that the widespread use of heart drugs has masked the effects of the obesity epidemic and that it would be even worse without them.

"We know that giving medications will reduce patients' risk, but we shouldn't put all our eggs in that one basket," he said. "We need to work harder on preventing problems at their root."
© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
3 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Deartrake says:
A comprehensive lifestyle does require the patient to walk out the door and just do for themselves. Dr. Alfred Bove, you need to do more than advise a patient to work harder
to prevent problems. My personal Doctor stated that I would die if I did not change my lifestyle and develop a serious excercise program. I took his advice.
I have documented my efforts on my PC.
The results are as follows:
Number of consecutive days power walking: 1,562
Total accumulated miles: 4,363.41 avg> 2.79miles /day
Total steps: 7,785,604
* Accomplishments * five (5) sportsline pedometers worn out
* wore out three pair of walking shoes
* lowered total Cholesterol from 240 to 130
* reduced weight 42 lbs.
* resting pulse rate 55
* lowered blood pressure to 98/62 (most recent)
A person cannot simply rely only on prescriptions and medicine to achieve a healthy
lifestyle. One must have a desire to be healthy and live a happier life. A good consistent
exercise progam and healthy diet will prevent or delay many health problems. My Doctor approved these comments.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
debinok1 says:
It is highly possible that even with lifestyle changes these people would still get these diseases. Why? because from the day we are born the death process begins. Medical breakthroughs will never change that. Just because we can influence one or two aspects of a persons health does not mean that the body, by design, will fail regardless. Which begs the question, why the push of drug companies to alter the ultimate outcome of life? which is ultimately death. MONEY!
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
baileyccc says:
High cholesterol is "The Greatest Scam in the History of Mankind." If you take a statin drug you will get heart disease. It is well know that the statin will stop the body ability to manufacture CoQ10 in the liver a necessary component of energy to the heart. High cholesterol is truly all about the money. Imagine taking a synthetic drug as a health preventive, there ain't no such thing due to side effects. Posted by Baileyccc
reply