Filtering system does better job of flushing fluids than pills do



The treatment requires no drugs and gets people home sooner than pills do.
ATLANTA (AP) -- An amazingly simple method of filtering excess fluid from the bloodstream appears safer and far more effective than the "water pills" that have been used for decades to treat hospitalized heart failure patients, doctors reported Sunday.
The research points to a new way to treat a problem that affects 5 million Americans and sends more than 1 million to hospitals each year, gasping for breath.
It requires no drugs, seems to get them back home sooner, and uses a device that is already on the market.
"It's really pretty exciting," said Dr. Clyde Yancy, a cardiologist at UT-Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas and an American Heart Association spokesman who had no role in the study. "You could use this right now ... based on this information."
The research was discussed Sunday at an American College of Cardiology meeting in Atlanta.
What happens
Heart failure occurs when weak hearts can't pump forcefully enough and fluid backs up into the lungs. Diuretics or "water pills" remove fluid but take days to work, are tough on the kidneys and often lose effectiveness over time.
Years ago, doctors tried filtering the blood to remove excess water and salt through a tube inserted into a large vein, but this never caught on because it required a somewhat painful and difficult procedure.
A new device by Minneapolis-based CHF Solutions gave a simpler way to do this, though it still involves a tube inserted into a vein in an arm, leg or neck.
A company-sponsored study tested this in 200 people at 28 hospitals around the country. Half were given the usual pills and the others got filtration for about eight hours.
Two days later, those given filtration had lost significantly more fluid and more weight -- 11 pounds versus 6.8 pounds -- than those on pills, said the study's leader, Dr. Maria Rosa Costanzo of Midwest Heart specialists in Chicago.
In the next three months, they spent far fewer days in the hospital -- 123 days versus 330 days -- and were half as likely to wind up back in an emergency room.

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