Posts Tagged ‘European Society of Cardiology’

Q10 and why it maybe useful for Heart Failure patients

May 27
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Heart Failure and Q10

Q10 and why it maybe useful for Heart Failure patients

If you have a look at our previous posts on Q10 we have advocated a look at this interesting supplement. Of course as usual if you are tempted to use it make sure you speak to your clinician and please note that it does have a procoagulant effect therefore if you are on warfarin then consult your warfarin nurse.

Researchers claim that patients who took the supplement, known as Coenzyme Q10, alongside their normal medication during a two-year study had lower levels of mortality than those who did not.

They say that doctors should now consider including the supplement, which costs around 25p per tablet, as part of the treatment of people who have a heart condition.

The supplement known as CoQ10, occurs naturally in the body and plays a role in turning sugar into energy for the cells.

Heart muscle contains large amounts of CoQ10, but previous research has shown that it decreases in patients who have suffered heart failure.

The new study, which involved 420 patients who had suffered heart failure, showed that those who took three 10mg tablets of CoQ10 a day had lower levels of heart failure two years later.

Fewer of the patients who had taken the supplement had died at the end of the study.

Professor Svend Mortensen, from the Heart Centre at Copenhagen University Hospital, who led the study, said: “The CoQ10 treated patients had reduced hospital admission rates for worsening heart failure and lower cardiovascular death, both of which may reflect a significant improvement in cardiac function.

“CoQ10 should be considered as a part of the maintenance therapy of patients with chronic heart failure.”

The results were presented at Heart Failure 2013 – the main annual meeting of the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology – in Lisbon, Portugal.

It is also found in foods such as red meat and fish, but at very low levels that deemed to be insufficient to impact on heart failure.

The molecule is known to play an essential role in the mitochondria, the tiny power stations found inside almost every cell of the body that convert sugar into energy.

The new study, known as the Q-SYMBIO trial, followed patients in Denmark, Sweden, Austria, Slovakia, Poland, Hungary, India, Malaysia and Australia.

After two years, 14% of patients taking CoQ10 had suffered problems with their heart compared to 25% of those who had been taking a placebo.

Just 9% of the patients taking CoQ10 had died compared to 17% taking the placebo.

CoQ10 is currently sold over the counter at pharmacists, including Boots, as an energy booster.

Statins, one of the drugs taken by heart failure patients to control cholesterol, is also known to block the synthesis of CoQ10 in the body, causing levels to drop.

It is unclear how many of the patients in the study were taking statins and the CoQ10 could have been compensating for this effect in the study.

But Professor Mortensen said he hoped to conduct a trial to see how taking CoQ10 with statins could improve heart patient mortality rates compared to just taking statins alone.

He added: “Statins reduce CoQ10, and circulating CoQ10 prevents the oxidation of LDL effectively, so I think ischemic patients should supplement statin therapy with CoQ10.

Helen Williams, a consultant pharmacist for cardiovascular disease at NHS Southwark Clinical Commissioning Group and a member of the Royal Pharmaceutical Society, said: “this is a relatively small study for a cardiovascular trial.

“We have often been misled before by small studies that fail to show benefits when extended to larger numbers of patients, so I would great these results with cautious optimism.”

We believe that any positive trial is worth exploring and should not be dismissed in public before a larger clinical trial can take place.

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European Heart Failure Awareness Day – Images of Event

May 07
Heart Patients

Helping Heart Patients

Pumping Marvellous Charity Stand

Pumping Marvellous Charity Day with the BHF

 

Images of our latest Charity fundraising event on European Heart Failure Awareness Day for Heart Failure Patients in conjunction with the BHF and NHS East Lancahsire. We raised £500 on the day.

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Cardiac Rehabilitation

Aug 05

Cardiac Rehabilitation

You maybe saying why are you at Cardio Rehabilitation which is not for Heart Failure; the truth is that my PCT the East Lancs PCT doesn’t offer Heart Failure Rehabilitation at the moment. From what I can gather they are redesigning the course and there is a change in cost centre etc etc and that is why there hasn’t been one for 6 months. With the emphasis now going on the General Practitioner I would be surprised if it happens at all. I find it very poor that something so simple but so effective becomes so complicated to set up and I realise how very lucky I was to attend the Cardiac Rehab course and lets remember these are my opinions as the editor of pumping marvellous.

Anyway My friend Angela Spencer who is responsible for Cardiac Rehabilitation at Burnley hospital ask me to post this text below as she gave it to me at my last class and said post it on “Pumping Marvellous”. Angela is a valued contributor to Pumping Marvellous.

The National Service Framework for Coronary Heart Disease recommended that Primary Care Trusts should put into place a framework of care so that prior to leaving hospital, people admitted to hospital with CHD have been invited to participate in a multi-disciplinary programme of secondary prevention and cardiac rehabilitation. The aim of the programme will be to reduce their risk of subsequent cardiac problems and promote their return to a full and normal life.

Cardiac rehab has been shown to improve prognosis and function with many people with CHD. Evidence suggests that when cardiac rehab is provided by well trained staff and people are offered comprehensive and tailored help with lifestyle modification including education and psychological input as well as exercise training,cardiac rehabilitation can reduce mortality by as much as 20-25% over a 3 years period.

Have a look at this quote from Professor Lewin of the European Society of Cardiology.

“If there was a pill that cost very little, reduced cardiac deaths by 27%, improved quality of life and reduced anxiety and depression, every patient in Europe would be expected to take it! There is no such pill but taking part in Cardiac Rehabilitation programmes can provide all of these benefits. In the UK only a small number of these in need are offered the chance to take part”

So I hope you read and digest this. I would strongly suggest that if you have not had the opportunity to go on the programme scream and shout until you get the opportunity – but do with little stress

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