A study on coronary heart disease has found that family doctors misdiagnose patients as not having CHD.

Of the 180 patients in the study, 31.7 percent had originally been misdiagnosed.

When a patient presents with chest pain as the main symptom, the family doctor has to decide whether immediate action is called for or whether watchful waiting is an option.

In this diagnostic cross-sectional study Stefan Bosner and his colleagues evaluated the data of a total of 1249 patients over the age of 35 years who presented to 74 participating family doctors with chest pain.

From this data pool, Bosner and colleagues extracted the doctors’ initial suspected diagnosis in respect of coronary heart disease (CHD).

In a total of 57 patients the doctor wrongly suspected another cause than CHD for the chest pain.

Nevertheless, the family doctors still referred one in three of the patients given such a false negative diagnosis to a cardiologist.

In view of the number of missed cases of CHD, there is an argument for considering a diagnosis of CHD in patients with less pronounced symptoms.

However, the researchers believe that if the “diagnostic threshold” were to be lowered, the result would be a dramatic rise in false positive diagnoses.

The results have been published in the current edition of Deutsches Arzteblatt International.

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The drugs used in chasing away blues could also make your arteries thicker, restricting blood flow and upping the risk of heart disease and stroke, a study co-authored by an Indian origin expert says.

Although depression is a risk factor for heart disease, the effect of anti-depressant is separate from depression itself, says study co-author Amit Shah, cardiology fellow at Emory University School of Medicine.

Twins are genetically the same but may be different when it comes to other risk factors such as diet, smoking and exercise, so studying them is a good way to distill out the effects of genetics, Shah says.

Researchers measured carotid intima-media thickness (IMT), the thickness of the lining of the main arteries in the neck, by ultrasound.

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Scientists have found that early life adversity through poverty, social isolation or abuse in childhood is linked to heightened reactivity, which can lead to heart disease later on.

“Many diseases first diagnosed in mid-life can be traced back to childhood,” said Karen A. Matthews, a professor of psychiatry and epidemiology at the University of Pittsburgh.

“Having some bad health habits in your 20s and 30s is part of the reason why people get diseases later on. However, it isn”t the whole reason. The evi

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