Your competent? doctor; if competent at all, already has protocols for all this stuff because they have been keeping up with research! That wasn't really meant as sarcasm, but I'm sure it's not true. Guidelines here; NOT PROTOCOLS! You need protocols, screaming at your doctor will be required, I'm sure!
New Canadian guideline bridges cardiology and neurology for brain–heart multimorbidity
BACKGROUND
Although brain and heart conditions share overlapping risk factors and commonly co-occur, current cardiac and neurologic clinical guidelines are typically produced within specialty silos. The objective of this guideline from a Canadian Cardiovascular Harmonized National Guideline Endeavour (C-CHANGE) panel is to expand on current cardiovascular guidelines to include evidence from the neurologic and mental health literature, with specific recommendations for providers managing comorbid brain and heart conditions.METHODS
The guideline development panel comprised an Executive Steering Committee; 10 expert subgroups to develop research questions and draft recommendations for specific brain-heart conditions; an Evidence Review Team to ensure the rigour and consistent application of the methodology; and an Implementation Committee to facilitate uptake of the recommendations by clinicians and into electronic medical records. The McMaster Evidence Review and Synthesis Team supported the literature searches and critical appraisal. A panel of people with lived experience of specific conditions and caregivers provided input on patient values and perspectives throughout the guideline development process. Our consensus process followed the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation II framework. We used an established evidence appraisal approach to determine the level of evidence and strength of each recommendation, and adhered to the Guidelines International Network's principles for managing competing interests.RECOMMENDATIONS
We developed 11 recommendations for the management of joint brain and heart diseases. Key recommendations include screening for cognitive decline in atrial fibrillation and depression in coronary artery disease; treatment of depression in coronary artery disease, cognitive impairment in hypertension, and dyslipidemia in stroke; and vaccination to prevent stroke, myocardial infarction, and dementia. We also recommend shared decision-making, including the use of evidence-based decision aids, to support patients with heart-brain diseases.INTERPRETATION
We sought to produce an implementable and actionable guideline for patients with brain and heart comorbidity. It is primarily targeted to primary care providers, but also relevant to help address and individualize subspeciality care and for interprofessional teams caring for patients with joint brain and heart diseases.REFERENCES
Management of brain-heart multimorbidity: A clinical practice guideline.
Edwards JD, Li Z, McFarlane P, Rabi DM, Gilbert J, Bajaj HS, MacIntosh BJ, Bittman J.
CMAJ. 2026 Mar 29; 198(12): E425-E439
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