Heart attack: Tongxinluo capsules may improve health

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
Red gel capsules depicting Chinese patent medicine Tongxinluo on a flat surfaceShare on Pinterest
Certain ingredients that are a part of traditional Chinese medicine can have anti-inflammatory effects on the heart. Michela Ravasio/Stocksy
  • An acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) is a serious type of heart attack that happens when a coronary artery suddenly becomes completely blocked.
  • Investigators recently analyzed how Tongxinluo, a traditional Chinese medicine that contains ginseng, might help reduce STEMI symptoms.
  • Those who took Tongxinluo capsules saw a significant improvement in their health after 30 days and one year of use as an adjunctive therapy combined with STEMI guideline-directed treatments.

Tongxinluo is a traditional Chinese medicine formulation widely used for millennia. The compound has shown cardioprotective potential in small in vitro, animal, and human studies, but it has not been tested in larger investigations.

Medical experts at China’s National Center for Cardiovascular Diseases recently set up a study to determine if Tongxinluo, taken along with STEMI guideline-directed treatments, might improve outcomes in people with STEMI.

In their 12-month clinical trial of 3,777 people with STEMI, the team found that this therapy was associated with markedly reduced cardiac and cerebrovascular events.

The original research was published in October 2023, appearing in JAMA.

The China Tongxinluo Study for Myocardial Protection in Patients with Acute Myocardial Infarction (CTS-AMI) was a randomized clinical trial conducted in 124 clinical centers throughout China. The Tongxinluo group had 1,899 people, and the placebo group had 1,898 subjects, although some were eventually excluded from the study.

To direct their research, the study’s authors asked: “Among patients with acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), does the addition of a traditional Chinese medicine compound (Tongxinluo) as an adjunctive treatment to guideline-directed therapies improve clinical outcomes?”

The researchers administered Tongxinluo orally via capsules to the participants for 12 months, and they gave a placebo to a control group.

The researchers assessed the capsules for clinical effectiveness and safety at 30 days and at one year. Both types of capsules looked, smelled, and tasted the same.

Both groups demonstrated similar patient baseline characteristics and care details. The average age of participants was 61 years, and 77% were male.

The trial ran from May 2019 to December 2020.

Endpoints at 30 days included major adverse cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events (MACCEs) such as cardiovascular death, myocardial re-infarction, cerebral stroke, cardiogenic shock, and heart failure.

One-year endpoints included MACCE, hospitalization due to heart failure, in-stent thrombosis, major bleeding, and all-cause mortality.

The primary endpoint of 30-day major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events (MACCEs) dropped substantially with Tongxinluo. Fewer cardiac deaths resulted as well.

Further, these effects carried on throughout one year with no significant change in major bleeding.

STEMI is a major, life-threatening cardiovascular event affecting people worldwide. In the U.S., an estimated Health">550,000 new cases and 200,000 recurrent cases occur every year.

Mortality rates at 30 days for people with this condition fall between 2.5% and 10%.

Risk factors for its onset include hypertension, type 2 diabetes, dyslipidemia, smoking, and family history of coronary artery disease.

Medical News Today discussed this study with Dr. Tom Ingegno, lead clinician at Charm City Integrative Health in Baltimore, MD, who was not involved in this research.

Dr. Ingegno said that Tongxinluo can also mean “through the heart collaterals”.

“Classically, these collaterals refer to smaller meridians that flow through the body. According to traditional East Asian concepts, disease occurs when there isn’t good quality Qi (energy) or blood, or the Qi and blood become stagnant. In the case of this type of heart attack, the concept is that these collaterals around the heart get blocked by stagnant blood, leading to the heart attack,” he further explained.

The clinician shared that the formula contains three different groups of components: animals, aromatics, and ginseng.

The animals include wingless cockroaches, leeches, and scorpions, some of whose venom helps root out the collaterals. Aromatics help remove inflammation and move the blood.

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