Increased prevalence of coronary aneurysms among cocaine users
A study, published in Circulation - Journal of the American Heart Association - documented that cocaine predisposes to coronary aneurysms.
“ We found a significantly higher percentage of aneurysms in patients who had used cocaine than in a group of patients of similar age who did not, ” said the study’s senior author, Timothy D. Henry, director of research at the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation at Abbott Northwestern Hospital, and an associate professor at the University of Minnesota.
Researchers examined the records of 191 men and women. They included 112 cocaine users who underwent angiography for known or suspected heart problems during a 10-year period and 79 age-matched controls who also underwent angiography.
Henry and his colleagues identified definite or probable aneurysms in the coronary arteries of 30.4 percent of the cocaine users compared to only 7.6 percent of the non-user controls.
The average age of the cocaine users was 43.7 years and that of the non-users was 45.6 years, an insignificant difference. Males made up 80 percent of the cocaine group compared to 61 percent of the nonuser group, a statistically significant difference. About 95 percent of the cocaine users smoked, compared to 71 percent of the control group.
Among all study participants, a previous heart attack and cocaine use were the strongest predictors that a patient would have an aneurysm.
Previous heart attack was common in both groups – 45 percent of cocaine users and 38 percent of control patients.
“ The extremely high prevalence of coronary artery aneurysms in cocaine users is striking compared with the control group, ” Henry said. It is also much higher than the rate of coronary artery aneurysms found in previous studies of patients undergoing angiography, which ranged from 0.2 to 5.3 percent.
About 50 percent of coronary artery aneurysms were related to the presence of atherosclerosis. Those aneurysms, located in the arteries that carry blood to the heart, rarely burst, and thus do not carry the same direct risk of death from a rupture as aneurysms in the brain and those in the aorta. But at least in cocaine users, coronary artery aneurysms may contribute to death in another way — by setting up a person for a heart attack.
Henry and his colleagues suggest two possible ways that cocaine might weaken the artery wall and lead to an aneurysm.
The drug can cause sharp spikes in blood pressure and it can damage the cells that line the inner walls of the heart’s arteries.
They speculated that once an aneurysm forms, blood may flow through it in a way that facilitates blood clots to form, which, in turn, can block the flow of blood and cause a heart attack.
In 2001, 27.7 million Americans age 12 and older ( 12 percent of this age group ) had used cocaine at least once in their lives and almost 1.7 million had used the drug in the previous month, according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
Based on medical records, the researchers were able to reliably document the frequency of cocaine use in 61 of the drug users. They found that 66 percent of those patients reported using the drug at least once a week.
Source: Circulation, 2005
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