DISQUS

A Happy Hospitalist: http://thehappyhospitalist.blogspot.com/2009/07/does-elevated-crp-cause-heart-disease.html

  • Keith · 5 months ago
    Happy,

    I think you missed the point of the article. CRP was thought to be a more poerful predictor of risk than LDL cholesterol. It did not necessarily state that it was the cause, but simply a marker for the presumed inflammation that occurs in the arteries of these patients. the more recent study suggests that CRP itself is not the protein causing the problem.
  • The Happy Hospitalist · 5 months ago
    Keith, I do understand. My assumption at present, and you can correct me if I'm wrong is that elevated CRP is likely a result of CAD and not a cause.
  • Anonymous · 5 months ago
    That's not what you title or entry suggest.
  • The Happy Hospitalist · 5 months ago
    Keith, the title/question asked if their was a cause/effect relationship between elevated CRP (causing) heart disease.

    The answer to the question is no, according to the new JAMA research. Where's the confusion?
  • Nurse K · 5 months ago
    If you consider CRP to be a test to indicate a higher likelihood of atherosclerosis/heart disease (not a cause--I'd never heard that proposed before) and look at the title of this little post, yes, it sounds like you don't know wtf you're talking about. I guess if you read the article then the blog post title isn't as crayzee. Definitely could have been worded more clearly though.
  • Frank Drackman · 5 months ago
    Whats CRP???
  • countby5 · 5 months ago
    I think the Women's Health Study (2002?), Heart Protection Study 2(Zocor study), and the latest Jupiter (Crestor) study all address CRP as a factor in heart disease.
  • Frank Drackman · 5 months ago
    Typical Internist...can talk for hours about a worthless test like C-R-P, but can't do C-P-R....
    And JAMA's 50% Drug Ads...

    Frank
  • Mehmet Karaca · 5 months ago
    This all started as when some studies suggested CRP is an indicator for high risk. Later researches started asking themselves whether the elevated CRP in CAD was simply indicator or the result of a parallel process. They have found, to nobody's surprise that many genotypes exist for CRP and people with some of these genotypes have higher CRP levels. They then tried to find an association between these variants and the risk of CAD which has failed as in this study and late last year in a similar study published in NEJM http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/abstract/35.... If they were able to find an association with these genetic variants resulting in higher CRP levels and higher risk of heart disease, drug companies would likely try to develop molecules to suppress overproduction of CRP theorizing that this, in turn, would decrease cardiac risk.