News Lifestyle Health Here’s how smoking increases heart attack risk- Study

Here’s how smoking increases heart attack risk- Study

The study found that risk factors such as smoking, high blood pressure, family history of heart disease and chronic kidney disease were more prevalent among the patients who experienced a relapse.

smoking heart health Image Source : PIXABAYHere’s how smoking increases heart attack risk- Study

Attention people! Young men who are chain smokers or who battle hypertension are at high risk of heart attack recurrence, researchers have confirmed. The study found that risk factors such as smoking, high blood pressure, family history of heart disease and chronic kidney disease were more prevalent among the patients who experienced a relapse.

"When treating younger patients with a history of heart attack, clinicians should emphasise better control of high blood pressure, high cholesterol and diabetes," said Joanne Karen Recacho-Turingan, a cardiology student from The Medical City in Manila, Philippines.

"Other modifiable risk factors to highlight in patient history and address with these patients include smoking habits and obesity," Recacho-Turingan added.

The findings were presented at the Asia Conference 2018 in Shanghai.

For the study, researchers analysed 133 young patients and found that males (90.1 per cent) with an average age of 40.9 years, experienced a second heart attack compared to females (9.9 per cent) with an average age of 39.6 years.

In addition, in these male patients, chest pain was the most common presenting symptom (81.8 per cent) while 90.9 per cent had unstable vital signs.

Heart attack in young patients can cause disability and even death at the prime of life. There are often serious consequences for these patients, their families and the health system, which can lead to an increased economic burden, according to the study.

"We must make sure to work with these patients on their modifiable risk factors to reduce their risk not just for a second heart attack, but hopefully, even preventing the first," Recacho-Turingan noted.

Previous studies have defined young heart attack patients as less than 45-years-old while some used a less than 40-year-old cut-off.  

(With IANS Inputs)