New Strategy to Prevent Acute MI in Japan-Juniper Publishers
JUNIPER PUBLISHERS-OPEN ACCESS JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY & CARDIOVASCULAR THERAPY
Present Status of Acute MI Patients in Japan
Approximately 40,000 patients die from acute
myocardial infarction (MI) in Japan every year according to the data
from Vital Statistics 2014 reported by the Ministry of Health, Labor,
and Welfare. However, the number of patients hospitalized due to acute
MI is about 69,000/year, and the in-hospital mortality of those patients
is below 10% according to the data from The Japanese Registry of all
cardiac and vascular Disease (JROAD) reported by the Japanese
Circulation Society. Therefore, approximately 34,000 patients with acute
MI die before hospitalization every year and approximately 40% of acute
MI patients die after onset mainly before hospitalization. Judging from
these data, we should pay more attention to how to prevent acute MI
rather than to how to treat acute MI patients in hospital to save their
lives.
It is well known that the major cause of acute MI
onset is thrombosis at the ruptured plaque that leads to the occlusion
of coronary artery. However, there are many silent plaque ruptures [1]
with mural thrombosis that heal without causing MI, which means that
plaques rupture is not a key process but the formation of occlusive
thrombus is the key process for the onset of acute MI [2]. The
thrombogenicity of blood has been reported to be extremely but
transiently high in the acute phase of MI patients [3]. Furthermore, it
takes days to weeks from the beginning of thrombus formation caused by
the ruptured plaque to the occlusion of coronary artery in about a half
of acute MI patients, while it takes no more than 24 hours in the rest
half of the patients [4]. Some patients have a symptom of unstable
angina during the process of thrombus growth. This symptom would be a
sign of acute MI onset in the near future.
According to the registry studies of acute MI
patients in Japan, about 40-50% of hospitalized acute MI patients had
pre-infarction angina within 30 days before the onset of MI. This
percentage did not change during the past 10 years. Themost important
thing is that those patients with a symptom of angina did not go to
hospital at that time and suffered acute MI later. This symptom of
pre-infarction angina is usually a chest pain, chest oppression, or
heart burn of a short duration (a few minutes to 10 minutes). They
usually do not think the symptom comes from heart and do not take it
serious, thus, do not go to hospital.
As mentioned above, about half of hospitalized acute
MI patients had a symptom of pre-infarction angina before the onset of
MI, but did not go to hospital at the time. If we can treat all of them
at the time of pre-infarction angina before the onset of MI, we can
prevent them from suffering acute MI and reduce the incidence of acute
MI into half in Japan. We can estimate that the number of hospitalized
MI patients may be reduced by 34,500/ year and the number of death from
MI may be reduced by 20,000/ year. Medication may also prevent them from
suffering acute MI, but percutaneous coronary intervention with
stenting may be more effective and reliable because the incidence of
stent thrombosis is extremely low these days.
There may be some difficulties in the diagnosis of
pre-infarction angina. Those patients often have normal
electrocardiogram, negative troponin, and normal echocardiogram. In
those cases, coronary CT is an effective method for correct diagnosis.
We need to investigate the effective strategy to make correct diagnosis
of pre-infarction angina when the patients with mild symptom of chest
pain, chest oppression, or heart burn come to hospital.
The Japanese Circulation Society has just started
“STOP MI Campaign” to educate people about pre-infarction angina and
encourage them to go to hospital when they had a suspicious symptom. We
can reduce the number of acute MI patients into half without any
development of drugs or devices. Thissituation may applies to many
countries, and thus, “STOP MI
Campaign” should better be performed all over the world.
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