Stress of surgery hard on the heart
By: Judy Foreman
02/08/1999
Dorothy Teixeira, a 76-year-old Peabody woman who
had a history of chest pains, got even more bad news last summer:
She had colon cancer and needed surgery.
In many hospitals,
Teixeira would have been taken off her heart medications during and
after surgery because of the fear that the drugs - called
beta-blockers - might make her heart too sluggish.
But her doctor at Beverly
Hospital, Dr. Lawrence Shinbaum, is one of a growing number of
anesthesiologists who feel that not only should patients like
Teixeira not be taken off beta-blockers, but that many others should
be put on the drugs just before and for a week or so after surgery
to reduce the risk of cardiac complications.
The issue can be a matter
of life and death - but it's hotly controversial as well.
Two years ago, Dr. Dennis
T. Mangano, an anesthesiologist at the VA Medical Center in San
Francisco, published a study of 200 patients who had heart disease
or were at risk of it and were having noncardiac surgery. He found
that atenolol, a beta-blocker, reduced the overall risk of death by
55 percent and the risk of death specifically from cardiac causes by
65 percent. The benefit was most pronounced in the six months after
surgery, but persisted for two years.
"We were surprised," says
Mangano. It's "very exciting."
Given that 30 million
Americans a year have noncardiac surgery and 3 million of them are
at high risk for heart disease, wider use of atenolol - and
presumably, other beta-blockers - could prevent thousands of deaths
a year, he argues.
The problem is that, aside
from some supporting research, Mangano's study is the main evidence
that would cause doctors to use beta-blockers more widely for this
purpose, and many say that's just not enough information to act on.
Mangano's data "are
suggestive because it's such a well-done study, but it is still a
relatively small study," says Dr. Edward Lowenstein, a cardiac
anesthesiologist at Massachusetts General Hospital.
Worse yet, it's unlikely
that much more data will be forthcoming, because many beta-blockers
are now sold as generic drugs, and manufacturers have little
incentive to fund the larger studies that could settle the issue.
That means doctors have to
go with their guts on this one, and their guts are telling them
vastly different things.
The nay-sayers stress that
beta-blockers carry some risks - notably they can exacerbate asthma
and suppress heart beat and blood pressure, especially in patients
who have failing hearts.
Dr. Lee Fleisher, an
anesthesiologist at Johns Hopkins Medical Institutes in Baltimore,
for instance, agrees that heart function should be closely monitored
and controlled during and after surgery. But he argues there's too
little data to recommend that beta-blockers be used more routinely
in surgery.
Dr. Thomas Graboys,
director of the Lown Cardiovascular Center at Boston's Brigham and
Women's Hospital, puts it more bluntly. If a person is at risk for
heart disease, he "should be on beta-blockers whether he's having
surgery or not," he says. But giving beta-blockers routinely to
surgical patients is risky because of the chance that the drugs
might overly suppress heart rate and blood pressure.
On the other side,
beta-blockers in general "are safe and have been administered . .
.to hundreds of thousands of people," argues Dr. Peter Rock, an
anesthesiologist at Washington University in St. Louis, who
advocates wider use of the drugs for surgical patients.
The American College of
Physicians agrees. In 1997, it recommended that all surgical
patients with heart disease or at risk for it take beta-blockers
around the time of surgery, unless there is a strong reason not to.
Last year, the journal
Anesthesiology threw its weight behind beta-blockers, too, in an
editorial that concluded that "the majority of patients with risk
factors for coronary artery disease should be treated with at least
some type of [ beta] -blocker" at the time of surgery.
The reason is that surgery
is a huge stress on the body.
"Having an operation triggers a cascade
of stress hormones," including adrenalin, which makes the heart beat
more strongly and rapidly, says Dr. Daniel Carr, vice chair for
anesthesia research at the New England Medical Center. "Even if the
person is unaware that his body is being operated upon because of
general anesthesia, these primal reflexes are still present."
And the stress from
surgery, particularly on the heart, continues after a patient wakes
up. "It's like being on an exercise treadmill for five days," says
Mangano, "even when pain, a notorious stressor, is well-controlled."
In fact, peak heart attack
risk comes three days after surgery, says Dr. James B. Froehlich,
co-director of vascular medicine at the University of Michigan
Medical Center in Ann Arbor. That's when fluids that have leaked
from blood vessels into injured tissues seep back into circulation,
increasing the workload of the heart.
The adrenalin surge that
occurs during surgery also has a lingering effect on platelets,
which become stickier and more likely to form clots that can clog
coronary arteries. Surgical stress also causes the fatty plaque that
lines artery walls to become unstable, which means that the pieces
of the plaque can break off and block coronary arteries, even months
later.
All of this has persuaded
many doctors to lean toward wider use of beta-blockers for surgical
patients with heart disease risk. "Even if the effect is half of
what Mangano found, it's still unbelievable," says Shinbaum, the
Beverly anesthesiologist.
Mangano puts it bluntly:
"If we demand further studies, it will take three more years, during
which time hundreds of thousands of patients will be deprived of an
outstanding therapy and might die."
Dorothy Teixeira isn't
about to argue with that. She had no heart problems during or after
her colon surgery, she says. And despite having chemotherapy for her
cancer, she says, "I went out New Year's Eve. I'm doing pretty good,
considering."
Previous "Health Sense" columns are available
through the Globe Online searchable archives at
http://www.boston.com. Use the keyword columnists and then click on
Judy Foreman's name.
What to ask the doctor
Things to talk to ask your
doctor about if you have heart disease, or are at risk of it, and
are facing noncardiac surgery:
-
Make sure everyone on
your team - your internist, your surgeon and your
anesthesiologist - know about your heart disease risk and all
medications you are taking.
-
Ask how the stress of
surgery may affect your heart and whether the risks of surgery
outweigh this risk.
-
If you're already on
beta-blockers and any doctor on your team suggests stopping them
around the time of surgery, ask why. - If you're not on
beta-blockers, ask if you should be and whether you should start
before and continue after surgery.
-
Before you're
discharged, ask how well your heart tolerated the surgery and
whether you should take beta-blockers at home.
For more information on
the arguments for using beta blockers, you may call the Safe Surgery
Hotline, 1-800-700-2617, organized by Dr. Dennis T. Mangano at the
Ischemia Research and Education Foundation in San Francisco. There
is believed to be no comparable site on the other side of the
controversy.
Judy Foreman’s column runs every other week. Past
columns are available on
www.myhealthsense.com.
Listen to her live
call-in webcast radio show every Wednesday night
from 8:30 to 9:30 EST on
http://www.healthtalk.com.