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Task Force: Nontraditional Markers Add Little to Heart Risk Assessment

Mike Mitka
JAMA. 2009;302(20):2192-2193. doi:10.1001/jama.2009.1678.
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Too often, traditional methods for assessing risk of coronary heart disease in asymptomatic patients wrongly identify some healthy individuals as high risk, while missing impending problems in others. Overtreatment can mean unnecessary costs and increased anxiety for those diagnosed, while undertreatment can lead to myocardial infarctions and death. Researchers have therefore begun to examine nontraditional markers in hopes of finding more accurate screening tools.

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Measuring the ankle brachial index and other nontraditional risk assessments for coronary heart disease should not be used routinely, said the US Preventive Services Task Force.

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