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Medical Forum / General / Nutrition / June 2005

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Popular Pain Killers May Increase Risk Of Heart Attack

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TC - 10 Jun 2005 19:32 GMT
http://www.nationalledger.com/scribe/archives/2005/06/popular_pain_ki.shtml

June 10, 2005
Popular Pain Killers May Increase Risk Of Heart Attack

Physicians have warned that the popular painkillers like ibuprofen can
raise the risk of having a heart attack.

A study by British researchers suggests that regular use of the drug
increases the chances of an attack by almost a 25%.

Other painkillers in the same family of anti-inflammatory drugs, which
are used by millions of arthritis patients, may be even more dangerous,
raising the risk by up to 55 percent, according to the study.

Thisislondon.co.uk cites Dr Hamish Meldrum, chairman of the British
Medical Association's GPs committee, as saying: "Patients should be
reassured that although this study raises some questions, there is no
need to panic.  And patients should not suddenly stop taking their
medicines."

The study from researchers at Nottingham University examined a range of
painkillers, and indicated that they all increased heart attack risk
when taken in the three months before the attack.

Painkillers have come under increased scrutiny since Merck & Co.'s
Sept. 30 withdrawal of Vioxx, or rofecoxib, which was shown to raise
the risk of heart disease.  Vioxx is a COX-2 inhibitor, a class of
anti-inflammatory drugs designed to replace older non-steroid medicines
which have been associated with gastrointestinal problems.

According to published reports, the study found that Vioxx raised the
risk of heart attack by 24 percent, Celebrex by 31 percent, and
ibuprofen by 24 percent.  For diclofenac, it rose by over a half to 55
percent.

The research - published in the British Medical Journal - identified
9,218 patients aged 25 to 100 in England, Scotland and Wales who had
suffered a heart attack for the first time during a four-year period.

The UK's Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA)
said that anti-inflammatory drugs were important medicines in the
treatment of arthritic and other painful conditions.

The agency said it would be examining the new study in the context of
other evidence.  It added: "Ibuprofen has an excellent safety record."

--------

Excellent safety record...

and a 25% greater chance of a heart attack.

TC
Sbharris[atsign]ix.netcom.com - 10 Jun 2005 23:40 GMT
Excellent safety record...

and a 25% greater chance of a heart attack.

TC

=======================

COMMENT:

It's a retrospective epidemiologic study, the kind of thing which would
find an association between yellow teeth and lung cancer, and then
breathlessly report that you need tooth whiteners to keep from getting
it. An increase of 25% in heart attacks in one of these things is
noise. People who take NSAIDS are NOT the same group of people as
people who don't.

SBH
Jim Chinnis - 11 Jun 2005 01:17 GMT
"Sbharris[atsign]ix.netcom.com" <sbharris@ix.netcom.com> wrote in
part:

>Excellent safety record...
>
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
>
>SBH

I suspect that the result is at least in the right direction. But
the study itself is worthless.
--
Jim Chinnis  Warrenton, Virginia, USA  jchinnis@alum.mit.edu
George Cherry - 11 Jun 2005 02:09 GMT
> Excellent safety record...
>
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
>
> SBH

The media really picked up on this one.
CNN did a major show on the study.
Just shows how the media promote delusion.

George
 
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