Posts Tagged heart disease
New Study: Women with Gout at Much Higher Risk of Heart Attack
Posted by Victor Konshin in Gout Treatments, New Research on February 9, 2010
A new study released this month shows that women with gout have a much higher risk of having a heart attack (acute myocardial infarction) then previously thought. It’s been long known that women with gout are at higher risk of heart attack then men, however, this new study that looked at the history of over 50,000 people shows that the risk is significantly higher than previously thought. Women with gout are 39% more likely to have a heart attack then women without gout. However, men only showed an 11% increase in this study.
The authors of this study speculate that this is due to men having higher levels of uric acid in their bodies throughout life than women. Women’s uric acid levels tend to stay low only to rise suddenly at menopause. As a result, it is believed that men develop more of a tolerance to the effects of high uric acid. However, the difference may also be due to the fact that women tend to receive a gout diagnosis much later then men and are often treated with different medications and at different doses. This is do to the incorrect belief, held by many primary care physicians, that gout is a “men’s disease”.
Regardless of the reason, women with gout, or even women that have passed menopause and have a family history of gout should take note. Controlling uric acid levels with medication is the best way to reduce the risk.
See also: Gout in Women
Is Febuxostat (Uloric®) Really Better Than Allopurinol?
Posted by Victor Konshin in Gout Treatments on July 3, 2009
UK’s National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence doesn’t think so. In December it issued guidance that the benefits febuxostat (sold in the US under the brand name Uloric®) have not been clearly demonstrated.
The argument is that the pharmaceutical companies tested febuxostat against a fixed dose of 300mg of allopurinol per day. Even though this is the way most doctors prescribe allopurinol, it is not the best way to use it according the expert “best practices” guidelines. The appropriate way is to adjust the dose of allopurinol until uric acid levels are lowered to below 6mg/dL (333µm/L). Allopurinol can safely be prescribed up to 900mg/day.
Because the pharmaceutical companies did not show that febuxostat was more effective than allopurinol when allopurinol is used this way, and because of the cost and other risks, they concluded that for most people it best to just stick with allopurinol.
Read the rest of this entry »
New Research: Allopurinol Can Help You Live Longer
Posted by Victor Konshin in New Research on June 29, 2009
New research published in the medical journal, Rheumatology, has shown that lowering uric acid levels using the medication allopurinol can result in a significant decrease in the risk of death.
Recent research has shown that high levels of uric acid have been strongly associated with diseases such as heart disease, high blood pressure, kidney disease, liver disease, diabetes, stroke and obesity. However, little is known about the effects of lowering uric acid levels on the risk of these diseases and even less is known about whether or not lowering uric acid levels can actually extend life. This is one of the first research studies that has shown a strong correlation between lowering uric acid levels and living a longer life.
This study, that followed almost 10,000 people, showed an average reduction in uric acid levels of 1.86mg/dL (111µmol/L). This resulted in an overall reduction in the risk of death by about 22%.
Unfortunately, we do not yet understand the mechanisms by which uric acid causes disease. The current theory is that uric acid, when it reaches high levels, is constantly forming crystals in all parts of the body, not just the joints as in gout. These crystals are spotted by the immune system and spark an immune response that increases inflammation. This inflammation has been identified as a leading cause of some of the most deadly diseases mentioned above.
Hopefully, researchers will soon find proof as to exactly how uric acid causes disease. This information will is the next step in finding the best means of dealing with high uric acid levels.
In the meantime, this new research shows us that fighting gout by lowering uric acid levels is not only the best way of stopping gout attacks, but may also be helping us live a longer and healthier life.
Gout: The Forgotten Disease
Posted by Victor Konshin in General on June 2, 2009
I think what’s most amazing about medical science is how small it’s focus has become. I’m not talking about the scale of medical science, or the focus on making people healthy, but on the scale at which it is studying the complex mechanisms of the human body.
Over the past few hundred years medical science has gone from looking at the structure of the body, to its organs, down to the cells that make up those organs and now down to the most tiny and intricate molecular machines that make everything actually work. Molecules so small and sophisticated that ever the most advanced microscopes in the world can only view them dimly and we are only just beginning to grasp how they actually function.
However, this all seems to be changing. This focus on the very small has obscured a larger reality – that the human body is a large, unimaginably complex and integrated machine – a single machine. If something is broken in one part of that machine, the function of the whole suffers.
I think that more and more researchers are starting to get their heads out of their microscopes and starting to look at what happens to the whole machine when those microscopic machines misbehave. And I think this will be the next great step forward for medical science.
The Most Misused Gout Drug, Colchicine
Posted by Victor Konshin in Gout Treatments on May 19, 2009
Gout is a disease that medical science obsessed over for, well, since medical science came into being. Only in the last fifty years has gout become a “forgotten” disease. Through this long and amazing history, gout has had a more or less faithful companion: the autumn crocus flower. It’s from the bulb of this flower that colchicine comes.
Some reports say that colchicine has been in use for over 6000 years while other reports say its a much newer drug that has only been in use for 2000 years. Regardless, it is still considered to be a first line drug by many doctors. Unfortunately, those doctors are grossly out-of-date. Not only in using colchicine first, but also in how they use it…
Gout in Women
Posted by Victor Konshin in General on April 16, 2009
A friend of mine once asked, “Gout? Isn’t that the old, rich, fat man’s disease?” Besides being uncharitable, this statement is wrong on pretty much all counts.
- People are developing gout at a much younger age now days thanks to the high-fructose corn syrup and other unhealthy dietary habits, but it is still rare for anyone under the age of thirty to get gout – hardly ‘old’.
- Now days, you don’t need to be rich to live a sedentary lifestyle and eat the unhealthy foods that helped gout develop its reputation as being a rich person’s disease.
- Gout is mostly influenced by genetics, so even those that are not “fat” can get gout.
- It’s not just a man’s disease….
Gout: Not Just for Men Anymore
Gout has long been considered male disease because estrogen plays a powerful role in keeping uric acid levels down in women. However, once women hit menopause, estrogen levels decrease and uric acid levels rise. In fact, after menopause, women are just as likely to develop gout as men of the same age.
Read the rest of this entry »
Why is Gout so Often Mismanaged
Posted by Victor Konshin in General on April 13, 2009
I often quote the statistic that 78% of doctors do not properly manage gout. This statistic is true (based on the research study that reported it) but the big question is, why? This article with take a look at this question.
First off, let me start by saying that I am not someone that bashes doctors and the medical community or says things like, “all doctors are arrogant, lazy, over-paid idiots.” Though, as with any profession, there will always be some that fit this description, most doctors are caring, compassionate, highly competent people that do a fantastic job. The problem however, is that the medical profession is the victim of technology, its own success and its failures…
Read the rest of this entry »
Secondary Gout
Posted by Victor Konshin in Diet, General, Gout Treatments on April 10, 2009
For the overwhelming majority of people with gout (90%), gout is a genetic disease. These cases are called primary gout. In this article will talk about the other 10% – what is called secondary gout. There is a very long list of causes of secondary gout. Here I will talk about the most common and the most serious.
Lifestyle
The single most common cause of secondary gout are lifestyle issues. Lifestyle covers a lot of different areas. Unfortunately, one of the most common is obesity. About 60% of Americans are now considered obese and the number is still growing and is the leading reason why the incidence of gout continues to rise. Being overweight causes the body to create more uric acid but also reduces the bodies ability to eliminate uric acid. If you have gout and are overweight, the single best thing you can do for your gout, and for your overall health, is to eat a healthy, well balanced, reduced calorie diet, lose weight and exercise regularly (See “The ‘Skinny’ on Gout Diets”). Of course everyone that is overweight wants to do this but few people are actually successful, myself included.
Is Gout Dangerous?
Posted by Victor Konshin in General on April 6, 2009
The overwhelming belief by most doctors is that gout is a relatively benign disease – that is, it may cause a lot of pain but really doesn’t do any real damage. Unfortunately, this belief is wrong. Gout is dangerous in a couple of ways. First, in the damage that gout attacks cause directly. Second, in the underlying cause of gout, a condition called hyperuricemia – a condition associated with many very serious and life-threatening diseases.
The Damage of Gout Attacks
As described in one of my previous post, Gout Basics, gout is caused by an immune response to uric acid crystals that form in the joints. This immune response causes much inflammation which is the actual source of pain in a gout attack. This inflammation also damages the joint slightly. If gout is not properly managed, over the course of years and many gout attacks, this damage can accumulate and cause constant pain in the joint, limiting of the mobility of the joint (the joint will become stiff and painful to move), it can cause boney changes in the joints called punch-out lesions (where the bone grows in abnormal ways) and ultimately, it can cause the joint to become completely immobilized.
Read the rest of this entry »
