Calcifications Seen in Blood Vessels on Mammograms May Predict Stroke
In addition to detecting breast cancer in its early
stages, new research suggests that mammograms may also help predict which
women are at risk for strokes, say researchers at the
American Stroke Association International Stroke Conference.
Calcifications found in the blood vessels of the
breasts - what physicians call benign arterial calcifications - were more
commonly found on the mammograms of women who had suffered a stroke, says
Dr. Paul S. Dale at the University of Missouri.
Stroke is the third leading cause of death for women
over 40, says Dr. Dale.
Previous studies, including some by the University of
Missouri team, have found a link between these calcifications, which are not
cancerous, and the risk of diabetes, heart disease, and stroke. But Dr. Dale
says he believes this latest study has found an even stronger association.
In all, they looked at 793 mammograms of women ages 40
to 90. On the screening mammograms, 86 of the 793 women, or about 10
percent, had the calcifications. But 115 of the 204 women in the group who
had had a stroke had the calcifications.
"Of those who had a stroke, 56 percent of them had
these calcifications on their mammograms, compared to about 10 percent of
women in the general population," says Dr. Dale.
"The important thing here is, we adjusted for age,
because age increases your risk of stroke and also of having calcifications
on your mammogram," he says.
While the finding is not brand new, it is interesting,
notes Dr. Suzanne Steinbaum at the Heart and Vascular Institute at Lenox
Hill Hospital in New York City.
"There have been other studies to show this," she says.
"As a cardiologist, I would love this information."
It is one more piece of information, says Dr. Steinbaum,
that could potentially help inform doctors about a woman's risk for
cardiovascular disease.
If she got a mammogram from a patient with that
information, she says, "It would lead me to believe I need to screen this
woman for cardiovascular disease."
Dr. Dale's team is continuing to study the link between
the calcifications and cardiovascular diseases and diabetes.
It is probably too soon, he says, to advise women to
ask their physician if they have calcifications on the mammogram. After more
research is done, that might be a consumer-savvy step.
Always consult your physician for more information.