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Is a daily prophylactic dose of aspirin appropriate for patients with coronary artery calcification by Chest CT or an elevated calcium score?

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Cardiology · Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine

There are no good studies directly answering this question. However, most studies that have looked at statin use in patients with elevated coronary calcium scores have found that many of those patients are also on aspirin 81 mg daily. My own practice is that I would certainly use a statin in patient...

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Cardiology · Harvard Medical School

Agree. Certainly, statins have the strongest evidence in patients with elevated coronary calcium and evidence of CAD. It is a more nuanced decision regarding low dose as the benefit is less than a statin and needs to counterbalance the risk of bleeding. Certainly, in younger patients with very eleva...

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Cardiology · Upstate Cardiology
  1. Any amount of CAC is suggestive of CAD.
  2. If you send a patient with chest pains to cardiac cath: he/she has 30-50% plaques and you assume that the chest pains are non-cardiac; you are still going to treat that patient with ASA+ statin+ BP Rx etc.
  3. So I see no difference between #1 and #2. Therefore p...

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Cardiology · UMass

I agree.

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Cardiology · Mount Alverno Center

I would look at known contributors to calcification i.e. Lp(a). If elevated, although generally, the guidelines suggest no treatment, there are studies now finding a reduction in MACE events with PCSK-9 inhibitors. More long-term studies are needed to see the effect on calcium mass in both the coron...

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Cardiology · Texas Heart Vascular

I do not use the calcium score alone. I try to examine all of the risk factors and come up with overall assessment of risk. There are multiple cardiovascular risk calculators out there. So someone with a greater than 10% risk of cardiac event in the next 10 years, probably I would start the baby asp...

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Cardiology · Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center

No. ASA is not indicated in this case

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Cardiology · Cardiology Clinic Of San Antonio Medical Center

When using calcium score, I think it is important to consider the age of the patient. There’s a big difference between a 45-year-old with a coronary calcium score of 100 and a 75-year-old. A 45-year-old has much higher, long-term, cardiac risk and a lower risk of bleeding. Therefore, it is important...

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Is a daily prophylactic dose of aspirin appropriate for patients with coronary artery calcification by Chest CT or an elevated calcium score? | Mednet