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Kidney Disease Linked to Future Heart Disease, Stroke Risk
Thursday, September 30, 2010
By: Business Week
Business Week
Two studies weigh value of using renal function as a way to
screen for other problems
Patients battling chronic kidney disease face a higher risk
for stroke and heart disease, new research reveals.
The findings are reported in a pair of studies, one from the
University of California, Los Angeles, and the second from the University of
Cambridge in England, that are published in the Oct. 1 edition of BMJ.com.
Past and current indications of a kidney disease-heart
disease link prompted the Cambridge team, which was led by Emanuele Di
Angelantonio from the department of public health and primary care, and the
UCLA team led by Bruce Ovbiagele of the stroke center and department of
neurology, to suggest that early signs of kidney disease should be considered a
prime factor when screening for heart disease and stroke risk, alongside blood
pressure and cholesterol levels.
However, using kidney disease as a heart disease screening
tool is complicated by the fact that kidney disease often goes undiagnosed due
to a lack of obvious symptoms, the study authors noted in a news release from
the journal's publisher.
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