Manuel Martínez-Sellés

Manuel Martínez-Sellés

Manuel Martínez-Sellés
Position

President of the Madrid Medical Association, Professor of Medicine at the European University of Madrid, and Head of the Cardiology Department at Gregorio Marañón Hospital

The recommendation of 150 minutes of exercise per week should be higher for greater cardiovascular protection, according to a study

A team from China used data from over 17,000 people in the UK Biobank to analyze the relationship between physical activity and cardiovascular risk. Their results indicate that the current minimum recommendation of 150 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity per week was associated with an 8-9% risk reduction. However, increasing the time to 560-610 minutes was linked to a decrease of more than 30%. According to the authors, who published the study in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, the current recommendations offer universal but modest protection, and optimal benefits would be obtained with substantially higher levels of activity.

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Using beta blockers does not benefit patients who have survived a heart attack with normal cardiac function, according to a new study

A meta-analysis concludes that the use of beta-blockers is not necessary in patients who have suffered a heart attack but have normal cardiac function. The research, coordinated in Spain by the CNIC, brings together data from five clinical trials and 17,801 patients. One of these trials, REBOOT, already showed that patients who did not have reduced cardiac function after a heart attack did not benefit from treatment with beta blockers. According to this recent meta-analysis, published in the New England Journal of Medicine and presented at the American Heart Association Congress in New Orleans (USA), the use of these drugs does not reduce mortality, reinfarction or heart failure in this group of patients.

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