Home Contact Us Site Map
Search for:
Mercy Babies Classes News
Health Info Find a Job Find a Physician
Mercy Health Center
Oklahoma City
Mercy Memorial
Health Center

Ardmore
Mercy Health
Network Clinics

Oklahoma City
Mercy NeuroScience
Institute

Oklahoma City
Oklahoma
Heart Hospital

Oklahoma City
 
Home > Health Information > E-Newsletters > Heart Health 

Protein Can Pinpoint Heart Failure

A telltale protein can help physicians rule out heart failure in patients with severe shortness of breath, a common but often inconclusive sign of the pump problem.

High levels of the protein, called B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP), are almost always present only in people suffering from heart failure, according to a new study of men and women with the condition. When levels of the substance are low, breathing woes most likely stem from other ailments such as pneumonia or emphysema.

Dr. Kenneth Baughman, a Johns Hopkins University cardiologist, says roughly 25 percent of heart failure patients may fall into a gray zone where diagnosis is tricky.

For these patients, BNP could be "enormously beneficial," adds Baughman, the author of an editorial accompanying the study in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Facts About Heart Failure

Heart failure is a leading killer of the elderly, causing patients literally to drown in their own fluids as blood backs up in their lungs. Treatments for the condition, which strikes 500,000 Americans a year, are only temporary, and it has no known cure.

"It's a progressive, fatal disease that we're still working very hard to figure out how to treat," says Dr. Kirkwood F. Adams Jr., a heart specialist at the University of North Carolina.

"If you have a biochemical marker that you could measure that will give you some indication of the heart function, it would be a lot less expensive" than such current physiological tests as echocardiography, he says. BNP can also be read in a physician's office, he adds: "That's very promising."

Shortness of breath—also known as air hunger—is perhaps the signal symptom of a heart failure flare-up. However, many other ailments can also cause it. So, physicians are always looking for a quick way to accurately determine whether the heart is at the heart of lung distress.

How Does BNP Work?

BNP belongs to a family of hormone-like molecules produced by the heart and vessels when they are forced to work harder. By helping drain fluid, relax vessels, and push sodium into the urine, they can ease dangerous strain on the heart muscle.

The latest study was a seven center, multi-country analysis of whether BNP could help diagnose heart failure in the emergency room.

Led by Dr. Alan Maisel, of the University of California, San Diego, the researchers measured BNP levels in 1,568 men and women who had checked into ERs with shortness of breath. Of those, 744, or 47 percent, turned out to have heart failure; 770, or 49 percent, did not; and 72 had a history of pumping problems that were not behind their current breathing difficulty.

The protein test proved to be more accurate than any other single physical or laboratory gauge of heart failure. It outperformed even the presence of an enlarged heart on a chest x-ray or a history of the condition, the researchers say. Patients with the worst disease had the highest blood levels of the peptide.

Elevated BNP—100 picograms per milliliter of blood—identified patients with the condition more than 83 percent of the time. It safely excluded those with levels below 50 picograms with 96 percent accuracy.

BNP Not a Stand-Alone Test for Heart Failure

Dr. Jay Cohn, a cardiologist at the University of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis, says BNP is a useful part of a total work-up by physicians, but it is not a stand-alone test for heart failure.

Heart experts probably do not need the test anyway, Cohn adds, since they can judge heart failure by their experience with the disease. However, BNP could assist generalists and emergency room physicians in their diagnosis. "It levels the playing field," he says.

BNP is also helpful in other ways. Cohn and his colleagues, for example, are finding the peptide can help them identify patients with heart disease who do not know they are ill. It is also a marker for how well patients with heart failure respond to treatment.

"There is a clear relationship between how effectively BNP is reduced by therapy in the hospital, and how likely it is that patients may need to come back" for additional treatment, Cohn says. The question, however, is whether the molecule reflects how sick a person is, or if that person would have done better with more aggressive care.

The drug Natrecor, made by Scios Inc., of Sunnyvale, Calif., is a BNP infusion at high doses that helps improve circulation in heart failure patients.

Adams is chairman of the guidelines committee of the Heart Failure Society of America, which will be releasing its updated recommendations in September.

He says the group plans to incorporate something about BNP testing in the new version, though precisely what isn't yet firm. "We're still considering the best role for it," he says.

Always consult your physician for more information.

August 2002

Facts About Heart Failure

How Does BNP Work?

BNP Not a Stand-Along Test for Heart Failure

Online Resources


In Other News About Your Heart:

Take Warnings About Sleep Apnea to Heart

The snoring caused by sleep apnea is more than just a nuisance—it can increase your chances of developing cardiovascular disease.

In a new study published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, researchers found that people with obstructive sleep apnea had a dramatically higher risk of developing cardiovascular disease than people without the condition.

But the good news is that with treatment, the risk drops.

"Obstructive sleep apnea was associated with an almost five-fold increase in risk for development of cardiovascular disease independent of age, body mass index, blood pressure, and smoking," says study author Dr. Yuksel Peker, a pulmonologist at Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Gothenburg, Sweden.

Adds Dr. David Rapoport, medical director of the Sleep Disorders Clinic at New York University School of Medicine, "This is one more piece of evidence that even if you control for other known risk factors, there is a higher risk of cardiovascular disease in people with obstructive sleep apnea."

Almost one-in-four middle-aged American men and 9 percent of women have sleep apnea, the study says. People with sleep apnea stop breathing frequently while they sleep. Because their sleep is interrupted many times, they are often excessively sleepy during the day. Some of the risk factors for sleep apnea are being overweight, male and over 40, according to the American Sleep Apnea Association.

For this study, the researchers recruited 182 middle-aged men to observe them over a seven-year period. Sixty of the men were diagnosed with obstructive sleep apnea. None had any other known health problems when the study began.

After seven years, 22 of the 60 men with sleep apnea had developed some form of cardiovascular disease, which includes high blood pressure, heart disease, and stroke. By contrast, only eight of the 122 who did not have sleep apnea had developed cardiovascular disease by the end of the study.

Peker says he suspects the increased risk comes from the intermittent periods of low oxygen supply, which puts stress on the body.

The researchers also found that treatment for sleep apnea was an effective way to reduce cardiovascular risk. Fifteen of the study participants with sleep apnea were considered "effectively" treated. Only one man in that group developed cardiovascular disease. But, 21 men out of the 37 who were "incompletely" treated—for example, they may not have followed the therapy described by the physicians—developed some form of cardiovascular disease, the study reports.

Treatment for sleep apnea can include surgery, oral devices that keep the airway open or a machine that patients wear during sleep that supplies continuous "positive airway pressure," or forcing air into the lungs.

"There was a very big difference between the treated and the untreated groups," says Dr. Glenn Gomes, medical director of the sleep lab at the Ochsner Foundation Clinic in New Orleans, who says this study further illustrates the need for people who suspect they have sleep apnea to get properly diagnosed and then seek treatment.


Online Resources  

American Heart Association

American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine

American Sleep Apnea Association

Heart Failure Society of America

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)

New England Journal of Medicine

A member of the
Sisters of Mercy Health System