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Blood clot breakthrough a saviour for diabetics

Posted 15th May, 2018

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A breakthrough by Australian scientists could soon protect tens of thousands of Australian people with diabetes from killer heart disease and strokes.

Researchers at Heart Research Institute in Sydney have uncovered why common blood thinners used to protect millions worldwide from life-threatening blood clots don’t work as well for people with diabetes.

The study, published in the journal Nature Communications, is the first to show the mechanism that triggers catastrophic clotting in these at-risk patients. This discovery provides scientists with a potential new way to protect the nation’s growing number of diabetics from suffering from heart attack and stroke, says HRI cardiovascular specialist and senior author Professor Shaun Jackson.

“Strokes and cardiovascular disease cause a lot of heartache for people with diabetes and their families, so to be able to offer a potential solution is hugely exciting,” Professor Jackson says.

Heart attacks and strokes are the leading causes of death and long-term disability in Australia. Each year, about 55,000 Australians have a heart attack – about one every 10 minutes – and a further 35,000 are hospitalised after having a stroke. Both conditions are typically caused by clots that block the supply of blood to the heart or brain. Blood thinners are commonly used to prevent clots, with millions of people worldwide taking them daily to keep strokes and heart attacks at bay.

But for those with diabetes, the benefits are limited. “Heart disease and stroke are considerable problems for diabetics, because they don’t respond as well to blood thinning drugs like aspirin and Plavix that we use to prevent them,” Professor Jackson says.

Described as the epidemic of the 21st century, diabetes represents the biggest challenge confronting the Australian health system, the specialist says.

“Cardiovascular disease kills 70 per cent of people with diabetes. It’s a huge problem and, like obesity, it’s growing,” Professor Jackson says.

“We now have 1.2 million people with diabetes in Australia. These people develop heart disease earlier and will die earlier so we urgently need to understand why they’re at greater risk.”

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