WeÂ’re talking about psoriasis, which affects about 2 to 3 percent of the adult population.
As if this condition isn't bad enough--bear in mind, it can be extensive and really affect oneÂ’s way of life because of the problems with the skin itself.
But now, there's new evidence it is associated with deadly cardiovascular disease. You know, it's sometimes referred to as the heartbreak of psoriasis.
And that couldnÂ’t be farther from the truth, in a literal sense.
New research in the latest Journal of the American Medical Association shows that adults with psoriasis, especially younger individuals, are at an increased risk for heart attack.
Dr. Joel Gelfand, the lead researcher at the University of Pennsylvania, says, "Psoriasis is such a complicated disease; most people that develop the disease earlier in life, in their 20s and 30s, it may be that these folks are the ones who may have the highest risk of developing uh heart attacks related to psoriasis if their disease is severe, as opposed to people who develop psoriasis later on in life."
Understand that psoriasis is a disease of inflammation. And there are inflammatory markers in the blood, like one called c-reactive protein, which are elevated with psoriasis.
The fact is, heart disease is also a condition of inflammation, and c-reactive protein can also be elevated with heart blockages.
“So other chronic immune conditions, like rheumatoid arthritis, have already been shown to be associated with higher risks of having a heart attack independent of these major cardiovascular risks factors,Â" instructs Dr. Gelfand.
The authors say the degree of association between severe psoriasis and heart attack in patients younger than 50 is similar to the magnitude of association for other major cardiac risk factors.
The bad news for Ernie Bickford, who is 72 years old, is that he has had a bad case of psoriasis for eight years now. "It's just itchy, you wake up in the middle of the night and you got to get to a door jam to scratch your back."
Fortunately, the good news is, because Ernie is older, psoriasis is not a heart attack risk that would be seen in a younger psoriasis patient.
Regardless, all psoriasis patients need to pay close attention to their entire medical care.
Dr. Gelfand says, "People with psoriasis are more likely to have diabetes; they're more likely to be overweight; they're more likely to have elevated blood lipids, they're more likely to be hypertensive, and also they tend to be more likely to smoke. So the patient should ask their dermatologist to screen them for cardiovascular risk factors or if not follow up with a primary doctor or internist who can do these screenings for them."
One thing for sure you can do: don't smoke, or if you do, quit.
Smoking has actually been shown to be associated with the onset of psoriasis.
The author says some people have suggested that therefore, its worthwhile encouraging people not to smoke if they have psoriasis because it may actually promote the disease.
Heart Attack Risk Calculator
A recent study has shown that the use of a combination of a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitor along with methotrexate therapy in people with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) was associated with a reduction in heart attack risk of 80 percent compared with patients using methotrexate alone, according to research presented recently at the American College of Rheumatology Annual Scientific Meeting in Boston, Mass.
Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic, systemic, autoimmune disease that not only causes pain, stiffness, swelling, and limitation of function in joints, but also damages internal organs as well.
Approximately, 2.1 million Americans are afflicted with RA, most of them women. As mentioned above, while joints are the principal areas affected by RA, inflammation can develop in other organs as well. Heart attacks, resulting from inflammation of the coronary vessels, are more common in RA sufferers.
Researchers recently studied the risk of heart attack in patients using a TNF-inhibitor (a drug that blocks cytokines and can turn off the chronic inflammation that causes destruction in RA), methotrexate (a drug used to treat RA by blocking the metabolism of cells) and other disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs), which are a category of drugs used in RA to slow down the disease progression, in a large population of patients with RA-many of whom were also taking aspirin.
Using information obtained from MediCal, California's Medicaid program, researchers studied patients over the age of 18, suffering from RA, who were treated with TNF-inhibitors, methotrexate, or other DMARDs, over a six-and-a-half year period.
A total of 19,233 patients with RA were identified. The patients' mean age was 55 years.
Approximately 79 percent were women. Of these patients, 13,383 took methotrexate; 14,958 took other DMARDS; and 4,943 took TNF-inhibitors. Exposure of one group of patients to TNF-inhibitors (taken alone or in combination with methotrexate) was compared to that of the other group taking methotrexate alone.
During the study period, 441 patients suffered heart attacks, of which eight percent were fatal.
Researchers found that patients on a combination of TNF-inhibitors with methotrexate treatment had a heart attack risk of only 20 percent of the risk compared to patients taking methotrexate alone.
However, there was no statistical difference seen among patients who were taking TNF-inhibitors alone, TNF-inhibitors with other DMARDs, other DMARD therapies without methotrexate, or a combination of DMARDs and methotrexate. Therefore, this reduction in cardiovascular events appears to be a function of the combination of methotrexate and TNF-inhibitors.
"TNF-inhibitor therapy, in combination with methotrexate, dramatically reduces the risk of heart attacks in patients with RA and should be seriously considered- especially in high-risk patients," said Gurkirpal Singh, MD, clinical professor of medicine in the division of gastroenterology at Stanford University School of Medicine, and an investigator in the study.
The notion that RA is a potentially crippling disorder is widely accepted. However, what is not generally known is that it is a potentially lethal disease leading to an increased risk of heart attack and stroke.
It is imperative that patients with RA understand the systemic nature of this condition and the need for aggressive intervention. This study lends more ammunition to the argument that patients with RA need to be treated with a combination of methotrexate and biologic therapy to not only reduce the chances for crippling deformity but also to reduce the likelihood of cardiovascular death.
Both Empowered Doctor & Nathan Wei are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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