CT calcium scoring can determine if patients need statins
She added that, while there are a plethora of scoring systems out there, many of them are flawed, either overestimating or underestimating the risk to these patients. Many patients are being placed on the medication, sometimes inappropriately, when their calcium score is zero. She said patients experience side effects as a result, and ask if they really need to keep taking them. Bullock-Palmer said the answer can be found in the CAC score. If a patient has a score off zero, it means they are at very low 10-year risk of coronary disease or a heart attack.
"I've had patients who are on these medications for years have a multitude of side effects and they just either refuse to take the medications or are not taking it consistently. I do the calcium score, it's zero, or I said, okay, well we can take you off the medication. But one of the main things I always emphasize with the patients is that this doesn't mean that you're going to go and get your next hamburger, but you really want to stick to a very healthy lifestyle to prevent the development of calcification," Bullock-Palmer explained.
Calcium forms in arteries as part of the disease process of atherosclerosis. It is caused by the healing process in vessels damaged by the plaques and inflammation. These rock-like deposits are clearly visible on low-does CT scans of the heart. The calcium can be analyzed manually by looking at each coronary artery and tallying the amount of the mineral present. But, in most cases the CAC score analysis is all automated by artificial intelligence algorithms.