Birth Control Pill Raises Heart Attack Risk 200%
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www.lifesite.net/ldn/2005/jul/05071207.html
LifeSiteNews.com
Tuesday July 12, 2005
RICHMOND, July 12, 2005 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Another study has shown that significant medical dangers accompany
hormonal contraceptives. When chemical birth control pills started being available in the 1960’s the dangerous side
effects were downplayed but very real. Since then, pharmaceutical developers have been at pains to reduce the
intensity of the pill, which is now commonly referred to as ‘low-dose’ contraception. The drug however, is exactly
the same kind as its earlier incarnation and is now proving just as dangerous.
A new study has shown that women are at 200% greater risk of heart attack and stroke with the "low-dose" pill,
especially for those women with pre-existing medical conditions. A group of researchers at Virginia Commonwealth
University and the Université de Sherbrooke have examined the cases of contraceptive-related complications in
women between 1980 and 2002.
The risk of heart attack doubled with women using the later "low-dose" version of the pill and the risk
returned to normal when the women stopped using it.
Read coverage from News-Medical.net:
www.news-medical.net/?id=11582
HW
Low dose birth control pill raises heart attack risk, especially in some women
Women's Health News
Published: Monday, 11-Jul-2005
www.news-medical.net/print_article.asp?id=11582 (print)
A new review suggests that low-dose birth control pills, which are generally considered to be safer than the pill
of the past, still carries an increased risk for heart attack and stroke. Although that risk appears to be quite
small for the majority of women, it could apparently be much higher for those already at risk for heart disease.
The researchers say that includes overweight women at high risk for diabetes and women with a condition known as
polycystic ovary syndrome.
According to researcher Dr John E. Nestler, further studies are needed in order gain a better understanding of the
risks associated with oral contraceptive use in these women.
He says it is quite reasonable to assume that women who already have an increased risk for cardiac disease may be
particularly vulnerable, but until now no studies have specifically looked at oral contraception use in this
group.
Although heart attack and stroke are rare in women of childbearing age, they do occur, and other studies have
clearly linked earlier generations of the pill to an increased risk in this respect.
The risks associated with today's oral contraceptives, which contain much lower doses of estrogen than the earlier
versions of the pill, are less well researched.
Nestler and his colleagues from Virginia Commonwealth University and the Université de Sherbrooke (Québec, Canada)
were eager to clarify this risk, so they reviewed relevant studies that included women taking low-dose oral
contraceptives conducted between 1980 and 2002.
They found that overall, the risk of having a heart attack or stroke was found to be twice as high for low-dose
oral contraceptive users as for non-users.
The risk returned to normal, however, when the women stopped taking the pill.
Nestler says that among among women of normal risk, this is extremely small, and the findings are not expected to
impact on the use of birth control pills in this group.
However,as oral contraceptives are the preferred treatment for polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), a hormonal
imbalance that is one of the most common causes of infertility, and the syndrome is also associated with a high
risk of type 2 diabetes, related to insulin resistance, abnormal periods, and excess male hormones, the findings
may be more relevant.
As many as 2 million women in the U.S. have both PCOS and metabolic syndrome, a combination of risk factors that
increases heart disease and type 2 diabetes risk.
These women are typically overweight or obese and have insulin resistance. They may also have high blood
pressure, low HDL "good" cholesterol, and high triglycerides, a blood fat also linked to diabetes risk.
Women with PCOS often take oral contraceptives for several decades to treat many of the symptoms associated with
the condition.
Oral contraceptives are also used to regulate menstrual cycles, often thought to be a key in treating the
condition, says Nestler.
He suggests that insulin-sensitizing drugs such as Glucophage may be a safer alternative to contraceptives, in
women who may already have a higher-than-normal risk for heart disease.
New York cardiologist Nieca Goldberg, says that even young women who begin using oral contraceptives should be
screened for heart disease risk.
Goldberg is head of the Women's Heart Program at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York, she is also the author of the
book Women are Not Small Men: Life-Saving Strategies for Preventing and Healing Heart Disease in Women.
She says that when a woman is considering her birth control options, that is an ideal time to be screened for
heart disease risk, and if that was done on a routine basis it would identify high-risk women early and reduce
heart disease later in life.
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