Cocaine the perfect heart attack drug — Research

Health & Fitness
Cocaine is “the perfect heart attack drug”, with users at much greater risk of suffering cardiac arrest than people who do not take it, a new study has revealed.

Cocaine is “the perfect heart attack drug”, with users at much greater risk of suffering cardiac arrest than people who do not take it, a new study has revealed.

Report by Mail Online

Researchers found recreational cocaine users have higher blood pressure, stiffer arteries and thicker heart muscle walls than non-users — all of which can cause a heart attack.

The Australian study is the first to document some of these cardiovascular abnormalities in seemingly healthy cocaine users long after the immediate effects of cocaine have worn off.

The researchers used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to measure the effects of the drug in 20 otherwise healthy adults who “chronically” used the illegal substance.

Compared with 20 non-users, those taking cocaine had higher rates of the multiple factors associated with increased risk of heart attack and stroke.

They found users had a 30 to 35% increase in aortic stiffening, higher blood pressure and 18% greater thickness of the heart’s left ventricle wall.

Study leader, Gemma Figtree, said: “We are repeatedly seeing young, otherwise fit individuals suffering massive heart attacks related to cocaine use.

“Despite being well-educated professionals, they have no knowledge of the health consequences of regularly using cocaine. It’s the perfect heart attack drug.”

Figtree, an associate professor of medicine at Sydney Medical School at the University of Sydney, said the combined effects of greater blood clotting, increased heart stress and more blood vessel constriction put users at a high risk of a spontaneous heart attack.

She and her colleagues at Sydney’s Royal North Shore Hospital recruited recreational cocaine users — 17 men and three women with an average age of 37 — who reported usage at least once a month for the past year.

They completed questionnaires describing their habit, cardiovascular risk factors and socioeconomic status. At least 48 hours after their last cocaine use, volunteers had their blood pressure taken and then underwent cardiac MRIs.

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