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Study
Finds Viagra Safe for Healthy Hearts
NEW
YORK (Reuters Health) - Although the impotence drug Viagra may
be risky for men with heart disease, there is growing evidence
that the little blue pill does not raise the odds of heart attack
among men with healthy hearts. A new UK study shows that men taking
Viagra did not experience a higher-than-average rate of heart
attacks.
``The results
of this study support other research that looked at this issue,''
Dr. Howard C. Herrmann, a cardiologist at the University of Pennsylvania
in Philadelphia, told Reuters Health.
In the study,
researchers evaluated 5,600 questionnaires filled out by men taking
Viagra. The research team further investigated all reported cases
of nonfatal heart attack, chest pain and heart disease caused
by artery blockages. The results were compared with heart disease
information about the general population of British men in 1998.
The heart
disease death rate among men on Viagra was 30% lower than average,
according to Saad A. W. Shakir and colleagues from the Drug Safety
Research Unit in Southampton, UK. Their report is published in
the March 17th issue of the British Medical Journal.
``Though our
results are reassuring, it is inappropriate to accept these comparisons
as definitive evidence of equivalence between (the study group
taking Viagra) and men in the general population in England,''
Shakir and colleagues conclude.
``The study
really does not change anything we did not already know. It is
consistent with other data that suggests that sildenafil (Viagra)
is safe,'' said Herrmann, who was not involved in the study.
However, Herrmann
stressed that patients with active cardiovascular disease need
to consult their physicians and be sure their condition is stabilized
when considering Viagra for treatment of impotence.
SOURCE:
British Medical Journal 2001;322:651-652.
Reference
Source 89
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