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Colon scans reveal heart risk.


Virtual colonoscopy virtual colonoscopy
n.
A screening examination of the colon in which x-rays obtained by CAT scan are used to generate computerized three-dimensional images of the colonic mucosa.
, a scanning procedure designed to spot cancer-related growths in the colon, may offer a side benefit: identifying heart attacks that are waiting to happen. Radiologists at the Mayo Clinic Mayo Clinic: see Mayo, Charles Horace.

Mayo Clinic

voluntary association of more than 500 physicians in Rochester, Minnesota. [Am. Hist.: EB, 11: 723]

See : Medicine
 in Rochester, Minn., have found that ominous circulation-hampering calcium deposits in an abdominal artery are visible on colon scans.

Jesse A. Davila, now at the Mayo Clinic's facility in Jacksonville, Fla., and his colleagues reviewed 480 patients' test results from computed tomography Computed tomography (CT scan)
X rays are aimed at slices of the body (by rotating equipment) and results are assembled with a computer to give a three-dimensional picture of a structure.
 (CT) scans. Physicians had ordered the scans to examine abnormalities in the patients' colons, but the images show a full cross-section of the abdomen and so also depict the main artery that carries blood to the lower trunk and legs.

The researchers used a software program to translate the visible signs of calcium in the CT image into quantitative measures of how much calcium had accumulated in the artery. They suspect that calcium buildup there reflects a similar accumulation in the heart's coronary arteries Coronary arteries
The two main arteries that provide blood to the heart. The coronary arteries surround the heart like a crown, coming out of the aorta, arching down over the top of the heart, and dividing into two branches.
, where a blockage can occur (SN:9/13/03,p. 174).

The patients showed no symptom of heart disease at the time of their virtual colonoscopies, but nine had heart attacks during the following 5 years. All nine were among the quarter of patients with the greatest degree of calcification calcification /cal·ci·fi·ca·tion/ (kal?si-fi-ka´shun) the deposit of calcium salts in a tissue.

dystrophic calcification
 visible on the CT scans. Had elevated risk been recognized in those patients, doctors could have taken steps to protect them, Davila says.

Not all researchers consider CT scanning CT scanning
Computer tomography scanning is a diagnostic imaging tool that uses x rays sent through the body at different angles.

Mentioned in: Apraxia
 of the colon as effective as conventional colonoscopy (SN: 5/1/04, p. 285), but scans provide a "rich source of additional data" that are useful in assessing unrelated health risks, Davila says.--B.H.
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Title Annotation:Screening
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 18, 2004
Words:271
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