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Calcification of the heart: mechanisms and therapeutic avenues.

Expert review of cardiovascular therapy
July 1, 2018
Chandana Shekar et al. (2 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The study does not focus on Garlic; it reviews therapies targeting coronary artery calcification and the role of cardiac CT in cardiovascular risk stratification.

Results Summary

The study does not mention Garlic or its effects; it discusses coronary calcification as a predictor of cardiovascular events and the utility of CT imaging in risk assessment.

Population

Not specified (study is a review, not a clinical trial).

Effective Dosage

Not mentioned

Duration

Not mentioned

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (5)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
CT scanning
neutral
coronary plaque as well as valvular calcification
-
-
provides a distinct means of detecting and quantifying
#1
CT scanning
neutral
detecting and quantifying coronary plaque as well as valvular calcification
-
-
excellent reproducibility
#2
absence of coronary calcium
decrease
cardiovascular risk stratification and management algorithms
patients
-
serves as a factor to de-risk patients
#3
Newer therapies
decrease
coronary calcification
-
-
have shown to lower progression
#4
Newer therapies
decrease
atherosclerotic disease
-
-
beneficial in slowing progression
#5
Abstract

Coronary artery calcification (CAC) is reflective of atherosclerotic disease and incrementally predictive of future cardiovascular events (CVE), independent of traditional risk factors. Extra coronary calcium such as aortic valve calcification, which can be identified and quantified by computed tomography (CT) imaging, has shown to predict future CVE in both asymptomatic and symptomatic (i.e. stable angina and acute coronary syndrome [ACS]) settings. It has hence been a vital tool in studies involving new therapies for cardiovascular disease. Areas covered: In this review, promising therapies on the horizon are reviewed, along with the role of cardiac CT and coronary calcification in these studies. A Medline search for peer-reviewed publications using keywords related to coronary calcium score, aortic valve calcium, and therapies targeting the same was carried out. Expert commentary: CT scanning provides a distinct means of detecting and quantifying coronary plaque as well as valvular calcification with excellent reproducibility. Based on voluminous data available, the absence of coronary calcium serves as a factor to de-risk patients for cardiovascular risk stratification and management algorithms. Newer therapies have shown to lower progression of coronary calcification, thus being beneficial in slowing progression of atherosclerotic disease. As British Epidemiologist Geoffrey Rose states, the best predictor of a life-threatening disease is the early manifestation of that disease. As CAC represents the early manifestation of atherosclerosis, it is the best-known stratifier of risk today, and its clinical use will continue to rise.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Aortic ValveAortic Valve StenosisCalcinosisCoronary Artery DiseaseHumansPlaque, AtheroscleroticReproducibility of ResultsRisk FactorsTomography, X-Ray ComputedVascular Calcification
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Citation Metrics
Total Citations26
Citations/Year3.7
Relative Citation Ratio1.32
NIH Percentile60.4%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
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Calcification of the heart: mechanisms and therapeutic avenu... | Panacea Index