¶ … Antidepressants May Improve Heart Attack Survival
Origin
Health Day Reporter
Ed Edelson
Date Published: July 05, 2005
This article was written in the subject of possibilities for improving heart attack survival through the help of antidepressants. Dr. C. Barr Taylor, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Stanford University School of Medicine, provided the results from his studies about the effect of antidepressants after a heart attack. Taylor also who wrote an accompanying editorial in the journal. Despite of Taylor's findings, Dr. Glassman however reiterates the following warning:
"even though a previous study produced similar evidence of the beneficial effects of antidepressants after a heart attack, the new finding may not translate directly into clinical practice"
Glassman points out that further study is still important to prove the effect of antidepressants after a heart attack and to provide enough evidence of the positive benefits of antidepressants that previous studies claim. Without a large scale study on the subject, it should be regarded that there is an apparent deficiency in the exploration done on antidepressants for heart attacks. Glassman claims that
" ... antidepressant drug reduced the risk of death or a second heart attack by 43%, said the report in the July issue of the journal Archives of General Psychiatry"
Although the claim on the positive benefit of antidepressants are clearly stipulated by a number of journals, the use of the drug is still dependent on the prescription of doctors. According to Dr. Richard Lange, chief of clinical cardiology at John Hopkins University School of Medicine, it is upon the practice and mandate of cardiologist and physicians to prescribe such drug in collaboration with psychiatrists.
Because of the issues that are still to be explored and investigated...
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