Author/Authors :
Harati، Hani نويسنده Department of Cardiology, Ali Ibn Abi Talib Hospital,
Faculty of Medicine, Zahedan University of Medical Sciences,
Zahedan, IR Iran , , Shamsi، Alireza نويسنده Department of Psychiatry, Ali Ibnabitaleb Hospital,
Zahedan University of Medical Sciences, Zahedan, IR
Iran , , Firouzkouhi Moghadam، Mahboubeh نويسنده Department of Psychiatry, Research Center for Children and
Adolescents Health (RCCAH), Zahedan University of Medical Sciences,
Zahedan, IR Iran , , Seyed Zadeh، Fatemeh Sadat نويسنده Department of Psychiatry, Ali Ibn Abi Talib Hospital,
Faculty of Medicine, Zahedan University of Medical Sciences,
Zahedan, IR Iran , , Ghazi، Arash نويسنده Wilderman Medicine Professional Corporation, Thornhill,
Canada ,
Abstract :
Myocardial infarction (MI) is a heart condition caused by the
suspension of blood circulation in a part of the myocardium. There are
different risk factors contributing to a heart attack. Some believe that
endorphins and endogenous opioids play an important role in causing MIs.
This study intended to determine the relationship between opium
dependency and mortality rate among patients with MI. This retrospective
study investigated patients who had MI for the first time and were
hospitalized in the coronary care unit (CCU) of Khatamolanbia hospital
in Zahedan, Iran, from 2007 to 2010. These patients were either opium
dependent or not. Four hundred patients were selected. The patients’
possibilities of death and re-hospitalization after the first MI were
confirmed over the phone. Data was analyzed through t-test and
chi-squared test. Of all the patients, 19.5% were opium-dependent. The
mortality rate in the non-opium-dependent group was 5.9%, while in the
dependent group this rate was 11.5% (P = 0.072). The number of
re-hospitalizations due to heart problems was higher in the
opium-dependent patients (P < 0.001). There was no meaningful
relationship between the mortality rate of patients with MI who were
either opium-dependent or non-opium-dependent. The number of
re-hospitalizations due to heart problems was meaningfully higher in the
opium-dependent patients; hence, educating people and training them on
the destructive effects of opium, specifically in patients with heart
conditions is highly recommended.