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Amphetamines could damage heart artery

Young adults who abuse amphetamines may be more likely to suffer an often fatal tear in the body's main artery, the aorta, US researchers said.

A study of medical records from 31 million people aged 18 to 49 and hospitalised from 1995 to 2007 found that those who had abused amphetamines had triple the odds of aortic dissection, the team at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Centre in Dallas, US, said.

Amphetamines, often called speed or crank, are widely abused but also legitimately used to treat attention deficit disorder, narcolepsy and other sleep disorders. They can also aid in weight loss.

Heart beats harder

The drugs make the heart beat harder and can raise blood pressure. Researchers have previously found they could raise the risk of heart attack and some had suspected that abusing the drugs could also cause aortal tears.

Writing in the American Heart Journal, Dr Arthur Westover and his colleagues said they also examined medical records for more than 49 million people over 50 from the same period.

"We found that the frequency of aortic dissection is increasing in young adults but not older adults," Westover said in a statement. "It is not yet clear why."

"Doctors should screen young adults with aortic dissection for amphetamine abuse in searching for a potential cause."

Greater public health

Records from patients in California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington state showed three times as many cases of aortic dissection linked to amphetamine abuse among young adults. These states also have higher than average rates of amphetamine abuse, Westover said.

"This illustrates that in areas where amphetamine abuse is more common, there are greater public health consequences," he said.

According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, amphetamine and methamphetamine abuse is worsening in the United States.

In 1992 about 21,000 people were admitted to hospitals for treatment of amphetamine and methamphetamine abuse, representing 1% of all treatment admissions during the year. By 2004, this figure had risen to 150,000, representing 8% of all admissions. - (Reuters Health, August 2010)

SOURCE: http://link.reuters.com/mew55n American Heart Journal, August, 2010.

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