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Showing posts from May, 2024

Advanced Heart Failure Therapies for Adults With Congenital Heart Disease: JACC State-of-the-Art Review

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wolff white syndrome :: Article Creator Stopping The Bias Snowball, Before It Kills Your Patient I arrived on scene perhaps ten minutes behind the first-in crew and the shift supervisor. Both the crew paramedic and the supervisor were knowledgeable, experienced providers. A school nurse was there as well, providing background info on our patient; a 16-year-old student with a history of asthma in severe distress. Our patient was in bad shape. She had severe difficulty breathing, tachycardia, was pale and diaphoretic, and you could hear the wheezes and rhonchi from 10 feet away. Her eyes had that unfocused, half-lidded stare that signals impending loss of consciousness and respiratory arrest. No doubt about it, she was sick and getting worse. She hadn't responded to multiple doses of her Combivent inhaler, and the lead medic – one our our flight paramedics who was covering a shift on a ground unit that day – already had a DuoNeb in place on a ...

Eisenmenger Syndrome: Background, Pathophysiology, Etiology

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lower extremity claudication :: Article Creator Shockwave Therapy Shows Benefit In Lower Limb Claudication Extracorporeal shockwave therapy may be effective for intermittent lower limb claudication in peripheral artery disease (PAD) patients unable to engage in supervised exercise or who experienced little benefit from that standard first-line approach, a randomized trial suggested. For the primary endpoint, patients who received nine sessions of the electrical impulses to the gastrocnemius muscle over a 3-week period had significantly greater improvements in physical function versus a sham therapy, as measured by the Physical Functioning domain of the 36-item Short-Form questionnaire (SF-36). At 12 weeks, a 3.8-point (95% CI 0.0-7.7, P=0.03) greater estimated median difference on the 100-point scale emerged for patients assigned to the shockwave therapy, reported researchers led by Paris Cai, MBBCh, BAO, of Hull York Medical School in Eng...

Anxiety and heart issues: How to safely medicate for both

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coronary circulation of heart :: Article Creator Heart Disease News Apr. 25, 2024 — A multicenter study has identified a potential new treatment for acute heart failure, a leading cause of hospitalization and ... Apr. 24, 2024 — Investigators have uncovered a way to unleash in blood vessels the protective effects of a type of fat-related molecule known as a sphingolipid, suggesting a promising new strategy for the treatment ... Apr. 24, 2024 — Cognitive decline among Black women linked to poor heart health in middle ... Apr. 23, 2024 — Using light pulses as a model for electrical defibrillation, scientists developed a method to assess and modulate the heart function. The research team has thus paved the way for an efficient and ... Apr. 22, 2024 — Atrial fibrillation is the most common cardiac arrhythmia worldwide with around 59 million people concerned in 2019. This irregular heartbeat is associated with increased risks of heart f...

9 Celebrities with Heart Disease

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asd heart defect in infants :: Article Creator Atrial Septal Defect (ASD) Repair Content An atrial septal defect is an opening in the wall that separates the upper chambers of the heart. It is one of the most common congenital heart defects, which are structural problems that develop before a baby is born or at birth. When an atrial septal defect is present, some oxygen-rich blood that should have been pumped to the body flows from one side of the heart to the other. This blood is then pumped to the lungs. This creates extra work for one side of the heart. If an atrial septal defect is large, heart failure may occur, although this is not common in children. Many children have no symptoms. So this defect may not be found until a child is older or becomes an adult. A heart catheterization can typically be used to close the opening. This prevents blood from flowing between chambers Heading What is heart defect repair surgery? ...

Pediatric and Congenital Heart - Cedar

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peripheral artery disease :: Article Creator Black Amputation Rates Are High —Knowing Your Risk Can Lower It Sign up to stay connected Get the top stories of the day around the DMV. Word in Black is a collaboration of 10 of the nation's leading Black publishers that frames the narrative and fosters solutions for racial inequities in America. Peripheral artery disease (PAD) is a common cardiovascular disease that leads to some 400 amputations performed each day in the United States. It is a serious medical condition, prevalent in the Black community, that can also lead to stroke, heart attacks and, in some cases, death. Yet a recent survey has found that while millions of Americans have cardiovascular disease or diabetes, very few are aware of peripheral artery disease, and even fewer have ever had a discussion about it with a medical professional. PAD causes blockage in the vessels that carry blood from the heart to th...

Pediatric and Congenital Heart - Cedar

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symptoms of mild heart attack in woman :: Article Creator 7 Heart Attack Symptoms In Women A heart attack (myocardial infarction) occurs if blood cannot reach your heart. About 80% of people who experience a heart attack report chest pain. Other heart attack symptoms can vary between men and women. Women, for example, are likelier to develop symptoms like back or jaw pain, indigestion, nausea, and pain down the left arm. Heart disease is the number one cause of death for women in the United States, accounting for about one in five women's deaths in 2020. That year alone, 314,186 women died from heart disease. Read on to learn the signs of a heart attack in women and when to get emergency medical attention. Design by Health / Getty Images What are the first signs of heart attack in a woman? The most common sign of a heart attack is chest pain. You may also experience back or jaw pain, shortness of breath, nausea, and vomitin...