New Heart Risk Test Coming Soon
Posted on: Monday, 6 December 2004, 15:00 CST
Christchurch researchers provided the stepping stone to a new test that will be able to identify patients at risk of a heart attack months in advance.
Doctors will be able to identify patients at risk of a heart attack up to six months before it happens by testing for an enzyme first investigated by Christchurch scientists 20 years ago.
Two scientists at the Christchurch School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Tony Kettle and Christine Winterbourn, were the first people to study seriously the enzyme myeloperoxidase (MPO).
When found in the coronary blood vessel the enzyme signals the likelihood of a heart attack. A United States professor, Stanley Hazen, discovered the connection between MPO and heart attacks.
"Higher levels of this enzyme are predictive of heart attack or even death," said Hazen, who was in Christchurch for The Society for Free Radical Research conference at the weekend.
Hazen's findings have been supported by a subsequent German study.
Hazen said chest pain, currently the most common indicator of an oncoming heart attack, was reported frequently in hospital emergency rooms.
Most of these complaints turned out to be a false alarm.
The MPO test, which could be conducted using a hand-held device by the patient's bedside, could help cut health costs dramatically, said Hazen.
"It will help us start to focus limited resources on who is the most in need so we can focus on individuals at increased risk," Hazen said.
He said one in every two people in industrial countries would be affected by coronary disease and one in every three would die from it. "That's more than all cancers combined," he said. The test will be made commercially available early next year.
MPO is a blood cell protein which fights infection by generating a reactive bleach-like substance, and turns nasal mucus green.
"This same caustic component that kills pathogens also causes tissue damage. We think people with higher levels of the enzyme are better prepared to live past the reproductive age, but as we get past the reproductive age when hardening of the arteries occurs, this enzyme is linked to increased risk for the development of heart disease," Hazen said.
Christchurch researchers are looking at a possible connection between MPO and cystic fibrosis.
Source: Press, The; Christchurch, New Zealand
Related Articles
- Heart attack bleeding risk test created
- U.S. Commercial Market Widens for Distribution of First Multi-Factor Genetics-Based Breast Cancer Risk Test
- Geron Presents Data at ISSCR Showing That Its Embryonic Stem Cell Therapeutic for Heart Failure Evades Direct Attack By the Human Immune System
- Orion Genomics Gains Exclusive Worldwide Rights to the IGF2 Gene for Colorectal Cancer Risk Testing Through Licensing Agreement With Johns Hopkins University
- Tethys Bioscience Announces Expanded Availability of PreDx(TM) Diabetes Risk Test
- Mini 'Stress Tests' Could Help Condition Heart To Survive Major Attack
- American Diabetes Association 'Sounds the Alert' for Marylanders to Take Diabetes Risk Test on March 27th
- Heart Surgery Drug Linked to Death Risk
- Heart Attack Series Hosted By The Medical Center of Aurora to Help Fight Heart Disease Before It Attacks
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds