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			 The longer people had lived with psoriasis, the more inflammation 
			they had in their blood vessels, the analysis of imaging tests for 
			190 psoriasis patients found. 
			 
			While these imaging tests didn’t connect vascular inflammation to an 
			increased risk of heart attacks and strokes, researchers also 
			examined data on roughly 87,000 Danish adults with psoriasis and 
			another 4.2 million people without the condition. They found each 
			year people lived with psoriasis was associated with a 1 percent 
			increase in the future risk of cardiovascular events like heart 
			attacks and strokes. 
			 
			“It has been suspected that long-term exposure to low-grade systemic 
			inflammation may increase the risk of cardiovascular events, but the 
			effect of disease duration on the relationship between psoriasis and 
			cardiovascular disease has been unclear,” said lead study author Dr. 
			Alexander Egeberg of Gentofte Hospital in Copenhagen. 
			
			  
			The inflammation in psoriasis is very similar to, and in many cases 
			can overlap with, the inflammatory processes that contribute to 
			hardening of the arteries, or atherosclerosis, Egeberg said. 
			 
			Even though plenty of previous research has linked psoriasis to 
			heart disease, the current results offer fresh evidence that living 
			longer with systemic inflammation can increase the risk of heart 
			attacks and strokes even for psoriasis patients who don’t have other 
			risk factors for heart disease such as smoking, diabetes or advanced 
			age, Egeberg added. 
			 
			All of the patients in the imaging portion of the study had mild to 
			moderate psoriasis. 
			 
			On average, they were around 54 years old and had been living with 
			psoriasis for roughly eight years. 
			 
			The duration of psoriasis was associated with increased vascular 
			inflammation even after accounting for traditional risk factors for 
			cardiovascular disease such as smoking and a family history of heart 
			attack or stroke. 
			 
			In the separate analysis of the Danish population, researchers 
			followed people for an average of almost five years. 
			
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			During this period, 152,122 people without psoriasis had major 
			events like a heart attack or stroke, which translates into about 8 
			people out of every 1,000 in the population each year. 
			 
			Over that same time, 4,472 people with psoriasis had major events 
			like a heart attack or stroke, which translates into about 11 people 
			out of every 1,000 in the population each year. 
			One limitation of the study is that researchers lacked data for the 
			Danish population on other factors that influence cardiovascular 
			health such as obesity and exercise habits, the authors note in the 
			Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. 
			 
			Even so, patients should be aware that psoriasis can make 
			cardiovascular problems more likely, said Dr. Lawrence Eichenfield 
			of Rady Children’s Hospital and the University of California, San 
			Diego. 
			 
			“There is some evidence that certain systemic medications that treat 
			psoriasis potentially decrease the inflammation and can decrease the 
			psoriasis-associated cardiovascular risks,” Eichenfield, who wasn’t 
			involved in the study, said by email. “The psoriasis treatment 
			options should be discussed with a dermatologist.” 
			 
			SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2fAzyPm Journal of the American Academy of 
			Dermatology, online August 18, 2017. 
			[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			
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