Some Heart Failure Meds May Raise Fracture Risk in
Women
2009-Jan-27
TUESDAY, Jan. 27 (HealthDay News) -- The short-term use of heart
failure drugs called loop diuretics does not appear to increase the
risk of fractures in postmenopausal women, a new study finds, but
their effect over the long term is less clear.
Loop diuretics include widely used medicines such as Lasix,
Bumex and Demadex, which are commonly prescribed to patients with
congestive heart failure. Because these medications increase the
loss of calcium, there has been a concern that they might reduce
bone mineral density, increasing users' risk for fractures.
However, "much of the association that may have been blaming
loop diuretics may have really been a result of the other health
problems that women had," said study co-author Dr. Karen Johnson,
vice chairwoman of the department of preventive medicine at the
University of Tennessee Health Science Center, in Memphis.
Johnson believes that doctors should still pay attention to bone
mineral density when starting women on loop diuretics. "You
probably want to make sure people are following the recommendations
to prevent osteoporosis, including taking calcium and vitamin D
supplements," she said.
The report is published in the Jan. 26 issue of the
Archives of Internal Medicine.
For the study, Johnson's group collected data on almost 134,000
American women who participated in the Women's Health Initiative
from October 1993 to December 1998. During 7.7 years of follow-up,
the researchers recorded all falls and fractures reported by the
women.
Among the women, more than 3,400 were taking loop diuretics. The
researchers found no significant association between loop diuretics
and fractures, including hip fractures, spine fractures and
falls.
However, there did appear to be a small increase in fractures
among women who took loop diuretics for more than three years,
Johnson noted.
Women should ask their doctor which diuretic they are taking,
because not all diuretics are loop diuretics, Johnson said. Women
should also ask about their bone mineral density to determine
whether they are at risk for osteoporosis and fractures, she
said.
Dr. Jeffrey S. Berger, a cardiologist at Duke University Medical
Center and an expert in women's heart health, doesn't think the
study is definitive. He said the long-term use of loop diuretics
could still result in an increased risk of fracture.
"One has to be careful when prescribing medications such as loop
diuretics," Berger said. "Medications may have harmful side
effects. It is important to keep patients on the medication for as
short a time as they need to be on it."
Berger stressed that loop diuretics
are effective and important drugs for heart patients. "They
help a lot more than they harm," he said. "They are useful and they
make people feel a lot better, especially those with bad heart
failure."
Still, "this study should raise a red flag," Berger said. "One
has to be mindful of potential side effects, in this case it's
fractures with the long-term use of loop diuretics."
Dr. Gregg C. Fonarow, a professor of cardiology at the
University of California, Los Angeles, agreed that the study is not
the last word on the subject.
"It is important to note that the dose of loop diuretics were
not collected [in the study] and even among the women reported to
have heart failure there was minimal use of guideline-recommended
heart failure medications." Fonarow said. "As such, it is unlikely
this study involved many patients on higher doses of loop diuretics
or with moderate to severe heart failure."
That means that, "there is a need for further studies to
determine if moderate- or high-dose loop diuretic use is associated
with bone fractures and falls," Fonarow said.
More information
For more information on osteoporosis, visit the
U.S. National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin
Diseases.
HealthDay News
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