Call for 3D Heart Attack Prevention Testing

heartThe headlines have been dominated by heart attack coverage and the tragic demise of sportspeople and politicians alike of late, but what about the 120 Australians who are struck by heart attack every day, the ones we don’t hear about? Leading preventative cardiologist Dr. Warrick Bishop, says It has been a long-known fact that cardiovascular disease and heart attack is and still remains the biggest killer of both men and women across the country, and that 25% of these affect people younger than 65 years of age is astounding. Especially, when we know that 80% of these heart attacks are preventable.
“We have to take a pro-active stance around heart attack if we are serious about curbing the sheer number of cases and with it the many lives lost, often too early.” Dr. Bishop commented. Dr. Bishop who is an authority on preventative cardiology in Australia, has been advocating for early testing to identify risk factors for heart attack and to undertake 3D Heart Imaging Scans – which are still not broadly accessed for people that fit the intermediate-risk group. He has been widely interviewed and featured in print media, radio, and TV on the topic and especially in response to the recent losses, namely Shane Warne, Rod Marsh, and Senator Kimberley Kitching.
Dr. Bishop said the real issue here though is that one in four people face heart disease, killing 118 people a day or one every 12 minutes, that is over a quarter of all deaths in the country. We spend over $5 billion annually in providing care and rehabilitation to those who survive a heart attack, yet don’t invest in prevention. Come to cancer, our government invests around 120 million dollars per annum on early detection of cancer, such as breast screening, bowel cancer tests, and the like, however in view of the billions spent on providing post-heart-attack care, wouldn’t funding preventative measures of heart attacks be a valuable investment?
“We have to look at the key factors around heart attack and actively reduce these. Combined with early testing, being at between 45-50 years for men, 55-60 years for women, and 30 years for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders, we can actually bring these shocking statistics around heart attack down,” Dr. Bishop commented.




Dr. Warrick Bishop, who heads the Healthy Heart Network said that with the news of yet another sportsperson at age 52, former AFL player Dean Willis, suffering a heart attack, it begs to question, how many more high-profile people do we need to come across our headlines before we will shift from a ‘tow-truck’ approach to a proactive ‘maintenance’ one… like we do on our cars.
“While we have seen a spike in people taking the Virtual Heart Scan online and consequently getting sent for the 3D Heart Imaging Scan, it is by far not enough to curb the occurrence of heart attacks, be it in younger or middle-aged Australians, or the over 65-year-old population,” Dr. Bishop commented.
Dr. Bishop explained that when we look at the mobilisation by state and federal health advisors to get the largest part if not the entire population to undergo Covid-19 testing and for most to get vaccinated, one has to wonder whether we cannot bring those in the intermediate and high-risk groups of heart attack to take the 3D Heart Imaging Scan. This would really provide scope for preventing heart attacks on a large scale. “The big difference with 3D heart imaging, a specialised CT scan of the chest that takes only minutes to complete, is that it literally allows cardiologists to see the condition of the heart to identify calcification, indicating plaque build up in the arteries, and it has already saved hundreds if not thousands of lives,” Dr. Bishop commented.
According to experts, we don’t get the same level of insight into people’s individual heart health from stress tests or risk indicators such as blood pressure and cholesterol levels. While the key risk factors that affect most Australians are diet, lack of exercise, being overweight, age, smoking/drinking alcohol, stress and family history – unless we literally look ‘under the bonnet’ we are only guessing the condition of the ‘engine’, says Dr. Bishop.
The Doctor said that the prominent number of younger Australians suffering heart attacks speak for themselves in that there are multiple factors that place them at risk and more often than not, it is fit, active, and younger people who fall victim to heart disease, not the stereotypical overweight, unfit person. We are 10-15 years behind the US, UK, and Europe when it comes to 3D image testing for heart attacks and yet we have had the technology available for as long. “We have to do something and in the absence of a broad-scale drive to get everyone with two or more risk factors tested with a 3D Heart Imaging Scan, we will have to take matters into our own hands. This means people have to decide to be proactive for themselves and get their heart health checked for their own sake and that of their families,” Dr. Bishop commented.
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