Gout drug can help treat Heart Attack Patients

A cheap, widely available drug used to treat gout could help heart attack survivors live longer and healthier lives, a new study led by an Indian-origin scientist in Australia has found. The study led by Dr Sanjay Patel from the Heart Research Institute (HRI) shows that an anti-inflammatory medication used to treat gout and combat arthritis also improves the heart health of people who have suffered a heart attack or other major heart event. The researchers said they have proved that the widely available drug is both safe and profoundly effective in reducing local cardiac inflammation.

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The discovery was made during an investigation into new treatment for acute coronary syndrome, a sudden and life-threatening condition in which the coronary blood vessel is blocked, triggering a heart attack or severe chest pain associated with unstable angina. Patel hypothesised that the drug colchicine, with its anti-inflammatory qualities, could combat the inflammation that plays a strong role in cardiovascular disease. HRI researchers and colleagues tested the hypothesis in 83 patients, Australian Women's Weekly reported.

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"We discovered that colchicine has a striking ability to suppress the release of these cytokines, effectively stopping inflammation in its tracks," said Patel. Researchers saw a rapid and significant drop in levels of interleukin-1 and interleukin-18 within the coronary arteries, as well as a drop in interleukin-6, a key downstream cytokine strongly associated with arterythickening inflammation.

They believe the drug works by blocking the NLRP3 inflammasome, a protein complex within immune cells responsible for the production of active IL-1 and IL-18. PTI


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