Common medications can make heart failure
worse
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[July 12, 2016]
By Will Boggs MD
(Reuters Health) - Many prescribed
medications, over-the-counter drugs, and herbal products can cause or
worsen heart failure, so it's important for patients to tell doctors
about everything they’re taking.
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So says a new scientific statement from the American Heart
Association (AHA).
Heart failure is the leading cause of hospitalization for people 65
years of age and older, and the average heart failure patient takes
an average of seven prescription medications per day.
More than a third of heart failure patients also take herbal
supplements, two thirds take vitamins, and seven out of eight use
over-the-counter medications.
Dr. Robert L. Page II, a coauthor of the AHA statement, told Reuters
Health by email, "When a patient takes at least four medications the
risk for a drug-drug interaction increases to 38 percent; this
number increases to 82 percent when patients are taking seven or
more medications, which many patients with heart failure do.”
The combination of multiple prescriptions, called polypharmacy, and
multiple illnesses makes heart failure patients particularly
vulnerable to drug interactions that can lead to hospitalization or
even death.
To help avoid these consequences, the AHA has created a
comprehensive guide to the prescription medications,
over-the-counter (OTC) medications, and complementary and
alternative medicine products that could worsen heart failure. The
scientific statement also offers a host of recommendations aimed at
reducing polypharmacy.
What should patients do?
"Patients with heart failure should always contact their primary
care provider and their healthcare provider who is managing their
heart failure if any new prescription, OTC, or herbal supplement is
started or stopped,” Page said. “Patients with heart failure need to
‘know’ their medications-the brand/generic name, the indication (the
reason you’re taking them), the dose, and frequency.”
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“Also,” he said, “patients need to understand that just because
something is ‘natural,’ it is not always safe. Therefore, patients
should always talk to their heart failure providers before starting
any herbal supplement.”
Dr. Kumar Dharmarajan from Yale University School of Medicine, New
Haven, Connecticut agrees. He told Reuters Health, "Patients may be
surprised to learn that commonly used OTC medications to treat pain
and heartburn can lead to fluid retention and worse symptoms.
Patients may also be surprised to learn that many herbal products
can affect the metabolism of their heart failure medications in
potentially dangerous ways.”
“Patients should not assume that OTC and complementary medicines are
safe just because they are available without a prescription,” he
said. “They should consult with their physicians before starting or
changing medications.”
Doctors can review an extensive list of medications that can make
heart failure worse in the July 11 early issue of the journal
Circulation.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1q3uqj1 Circulation, online July 11, 2016.
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