While most people know that chest
pain can signify the presence of heart disease, it is
less well known that shortness of breath can also be a
serious cardiac symptom.
Now, researchers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center have
found that patients with shortness of breath can have
a higher risk of dying from cardiac disease than patients
without symptoms, and even than patients with typical
cardiac pain.
Authors of a study published in the November 3 issue
of the New England Journal of Medicine reported that shortness
of breath was a significant predictor of death from cardiac
causes, as well as death from any cause.
The study was based on a retrospective evaluation of
medical records of nearly 18,000 patients referred for
cardiac stress testing who were then followed-up later.
Researchers found that when compared to patients without
shortness of breath, those with shortness of breath were
significantly more likely to experience death from cardiac
cause than patients without shortness of breath. More
than 1,000 of the patients denied having chest pain but
answered "yes" to the question, "Do you experience shortness
of breath?"
"Patients often do not interpret shortness of breath
as a serious symptom, but particularly in patients who
have cardiac risk factors and in patients without lung
disease, it may be the only sign of the presence of serious
coronary artery disease that may need treatment," said
Daniel Berman, M.D., senior author of the study and the
Director of Cardiac Imaging at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.
"If we can identify patients with coronary disease before
an event occurs, then the vast majority of the cardiac
events could be prevented by modern therapies. The problem
is identifying the patient at risk," he added.
In the retrospective study, patients without known coronary
artery disease who had shortness of breath were four times
more likely to suffer death from a cardiac cause than
asymptomatic patients and twice as likely as patients
who had chest pain that is considered to be typical cardiac
pain.
"These findings may in part be due to the fact that doctors
are more likely to send patients with chest pain to bypass
surgery or angioplasty than patients with shortness of
breath," explained Berman.
Coronary artery disease, usually associated with the
presence of plaque build-up in the arteries surrounding
the heart, is one the main causes of death in both men
and women. While it often is associated with chest pain,
about half of the patients with this serious disease either
die suddenly without prior symptoms or have a heart attack
as the first manifestation of the disease.
The New England Journal paper authored by Aiden Abidov,
M.D. and associates described the retrospective study
of the medical records of 17,991 patients referred for
stress testing by their physicians who knew or suspected
they had coronary artery disease based on their symptoms
or their cardiac risk factors. The stress testing was
done with myocardial perfusion imaging, the most widely
used noninvasive approach to detect blocked coronary arteries.
During the test, patients exercise on a treadmill or,
if they can't, are given medication that causes the heart's
arteries to dilate. Once the patient reaches "peak" stress,
a small amount of radioactive imaging agent is given that
concentrates in the heart according to blood flow, emitting
signals that are captured by a special type of camera.
The cardiac images show the parts of the heart which do
not get enough blood flow during stress and is very effective
in predicting short-term risk of a cardiac event and determining
whether it is necessary to consider angioplasty or surgery
at that time. Approximately 8 million stress myocardial
perfusion scans were performed in the United States in
2004.
The mechanism explaining why patients with shortness
of breath without chest pain were more likely to die was
not entirely clear. While some of the patients had underlying
abnormalities of pumping function of the heart that could
explain increased risk, most did not. Yet in the patients
without abnormality of pumping function, there was a tripling
of cardiac events rates in those who had shortness of
breath. One possibility is that shortness of breath in
the patients sent for testing is related to ischemia--to
little blood flow to the heart muscle. However, even after
adjusting for the amount of ischemia statistically, shortness
of breath remained predictive of an adverse outcome. The
authors speculated that possibly inflammatory proteins
that are associated with the development of coronary artery
disease--proteins that have been associated with malaise
and fatigue--may be responsible for the breathing symptom.
When the investigators used statistical techniques to
adjust for other significant factors between patient groups,
shortness of breath remained an independent predictor
of the risk of death from cardiac causes and from any
cause. In an accompanying editorial, Thomas Marwick, M.D.
from the University of Queensland noted "Because the absence
of chest pain has traditionally been interpreted to indicate
a low likelihood of coronary disease--and indeed a low
long-term risk--functional [stress] testing has been thought
to contribute little to the evaluation of patients without
angina [exertional chest pain]….These results should remind
us that symptoms other than chest pain are of value in
identifying patients with suspected coronary artery disease
who should undergo functional testing."
Marwick also noted that in the patients with shortness
of breath, the study results showed that the myocardial
perfusion test was effective in distinguishing the degree
of risk of cardiac death--the risk was more than five
times as high in the patients with very abnormal scans
than in the patients with normal scans.
"Our findings are important for the public as well as
for doctors," said Berman. "Knowledge of these findings
may lead doctors to refer patients with shortness of breath
for testing, and then more readily send those who are
found to be at serious risk for a life-saving revascularization
procedure. For patients, increased awareness of shortness
of breath as a possible cardiac symptom will hopefully
prompt those with unexplained shortness of breath to see
their doctor sooner rather than later."
Reference
Source 125
November
4, 2005