Heart Attacksโ May Be Triggered byโข Bacterial Infection,New Researchโค Suggests
Tampere,Finland – โคA groundbreaking study reveals a potential link between bacterial infection andโฃ heart attacks,challenging long-held โขassumptions about the causes of coronary artery disease. Researchers have discovered genetic material from oral bacteria within โatherosclerotic plaques,suggesting infection may play a โdirect role in triggering myocardial infarction.
The research, โconducted by teams at Tampere and Oulu Universities, theโข Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare, and the Universityโค of Oxford, demonstrates that aโฃ viral infection or other external trigger can activate bacterial biofilms within arteries. These biofilms then proliferate, initiating an inflammatory response. This inflammation can weaken โฃthe fibrous cap of plaque buildup, leading to rupture, thrombus formation, and โultimately, a heart attack.
“Bacterial involvement in coronary artery disease โคhas long been suspected, but direct and convincing evidence has been lacking,” explained Professor Pekka Karhunen, whoโฃ led the โstudy. “Our study โคdemonstrated the presence of genetic material – DNA – from several oral bacteria inside atherosclerotic plaques.”
The team validated โขtheir findings by developing anโฃ antibody targeting the identifiedโ bacteria, which revealed biofilm structures in arterial tissue. Bacteria released from these biofilmsโค were observed in cases of myocardial โขinfarction, withโ the body’s immune response to the bacteria triggering โthe inflammation that ruptured cholesterol-laden plaques.
Previously, it was believed thatโค coronary artery disease โwas initiated solely by oxidised low-density lipoprotein (LDL). These new โfindings open โavenues for novel diagnostic โคand โฃtherapeutic strategies,including the potential for vaccination toโ prevent both coronary artery disease and heart attacks.
Tissue samples โwere analyzed fromโ individuals who died of sudden cardiac death, and โalso fromโข patients โundergoing surgery for atherosclerosis โฃin carotid and peripheral arteries. The research was supported by an extensive EU-funded cardiovascular research project spanning 11 countries, alongside funding from the Finnish Foundation for Cardiovascular Research and the Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation.

