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Thursday, August 9, 2007

Selected topics

Heart Attack Heart Attack or Acute MI: This section provides fundamental details about a heart attack together with its cause, symptoms and treatment.

Heart Failure Heart Failure or CHF: Using easy to understand examples, this section provides fundamental information about congestive heart failure, together with its cause, symptoms and treatment.

Heart Basics Heart Basics 101 provides the viewer with fundamental information about the structure and function of the heart.

Isotope Stress Test Isotope Stress Test: An isotope tracer is used to increase the accuracy of a stress test in helping diagnose coronary artery diseas

PTCA PTCA or Balloon Angioplasty: A thin catheter is guided to a coronary artery blockage. A small balloon at its tip is then inflated and deflated to open up the coronary artery blockage. The balloon catheter is then removed.

Drug coated stent Drug Coated Stent: The stent is coated with a medicine to reduce the chance of a coronary artery blockage from returning in the same area.

Chset xray Chest x-ray: This test helps answer questions about the size of the heart, fluid in the lungs, pneumonia and multiple other abnormalities that may be accounting for the patient's problems.

TEE TEE or TE Echocardiogram: TEE uses ultrasound to examine the heart with the use of a probe that looks at the heart from the back.

Lectures On-line Lectures: This uses a familiar classroom lecture format. We balance simplicity with the needed depth of information. Animations and common analogies are used to illustrate points.

Prevention of Heart Disease

You can do several things to prevent heart disease:

Begin or sustain some regular physical activity. Even a modest amount of activity each day will lower your LDL cholesterol and raise your HDL cholesterol. Exercise also improves your heart's pumping efficiency, benefits your circulation and increases your overall strength and endurance.

Increase your consumption of vegetables, fresh fruits, low-fat milk and other dairy products, grains, fish and poultry. The main objective here is to replace foods high in saturated fat with healthier foods. Multiple sources of information exist that will help you create a heart-healthy diet.

Know your cholesterol, LDL, HDL and triglyceride levels. The level of cholesterol in your blood is a good indicator of the health of your heart and blood vessels. Generally, the higher your cholesterol level, the greater your risk of heart disease.

  • Ldl stands for low-density lipoprotein. LDLs carry cholesterol around the body. LDLs deposit cholesterol in blood vessels where they can eventually build up and restrict blood flow. The more LDLs you have, the higher your risk factor for heart disease.
  • Hdl stands for high-density lipoprotein. HDLs remove cholesterol from artery walls and carry it to the liver, which breaks it down.
  • Triglycerides are a type of fat present in foods and manufactured in the liver. The higher your triglyceride level, the greater your risk of heart disease.

Watch your weight. Obesity raises triglyceride levels, which in turn promotes heart disease. Diet and physical activity should help you lower and maintain your weight.

Know your family's history of heart conditions. A family history of obesity, diabetes, heart attack, stroke or high blood pressure increases your risk of heart disease so consult a cardiologist before the age of 55 for males and 65 for females.

Pay attention to the pain. If you feel your vitality generally slipping, have a checkup. If you are having chest pains go to the nearest emergency room.

Reduce your stress.

Don't smoke.

Limit the amount of alcohol you consume.


Treatment of Heart Disease

There are several treatment methods that will help improve blood flow through the arteries:

Medications

Beta-blockers, such as atenol (Tenormin), nadolol (Corgard), metoprolol (Lopressor, Toprol XL), and propranolol (Inderal), lower blood pressure by reducing the amount of blood pumped by the heart. These drugs may also reduce the risk of a subsequent heart attack in patients who have already had one. Possible side effects include fatigue, impotence, abnormalities in fatty substances in the blood and interference with blood-sugar regulation. . (View list of beta-blockers)

Calcium channel blockers, such as amlodipine (Norvasc), diltiazem (Cardizen, Tiazac), nifedipine (Adalat, Procardia), nisoldipine (Sular), and verapamil (Calan, Isoptin, Verelan), relax blood vessel walls, thereby lowering pressure. They are also quite expensive and may cause side effects such as constipation and swollen legs. There are also Nitrate-based drugs and vasodilator drugs. (View list of calcium channel blockers)

Diuretics, such as chlorothiazide (Diuril) and hydrochlorothiazide (Esidrix), lower blood pressure by causing the body to expel excess fluids and sodium through urination. If the desired effects aren't realized with diuretics alone, in combination they may enhance the effect of other blood pressure medications. (View list of diuretics).

Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme (ACE) Inhibitors, such as captopril (Capoten), enalapril (Vasotec), and lisinopril (Prinivil, Zestril), expand blood vessels and decrease resistance. This allows blood to flow more easily and makes the heart's work easier. (View list of ACE inhibitors).

Angiotensin-2 (AT-2) receptor antagonists, such as candesartan (Atacand) and

irbesartan (Avapro), have been shown to achieve effects similar to those found in ACE inhibitors. Instead of lowering levels of angiotensin II (as ACE inhibitors do), angiotensin II receptor blockers prevent it from effecting the heart and blood vessels. This keeps blood pressure from rising.

Statins, such as atorvastatin (Lipitor), pravastatin (Pravachol), and rosuvastatin calcium (Crestor), are very effective in lowering LDL ("bad") cholesterol levels and have few short-term side effects. They work in the liver to interrupt the formation of cholesterol from the circulating blood. (View list of statins). Ezetimibe (Zetia) is a newer drug that lowers LDL (“bad”) cholesterol by working in the digestive tract to reduce the absorption of cholesterol. It is sometimes prescribed along with a statin.

Balloon Angioplasty

A nonsurgical procedure designed to dilate (widen or expand) narrowed coronary arteries. It works as follows:

First, a doctor inserts a thin plastic tube (a catheter) into an artery in your arm or leg. He or she then guides this catheter to the aorta (the large artery that conducts blood from the heart to the rest of the body). From there it passes into the coronary arteries.

As the doctor guides the catheter to the coronary arteries, the procedure is monitored by a special x-ray camera called a fluoroscope. Once the catheter is passed into the narrowed coronary artery, a second, smaller catheter with a balloon on its' tip is passed through the first catheter. You can think of this as one "pipe" passed through another.

As this second catheter is passed through the first, the balloon remains deflated; however, once the balloon tip reaches the narrowed part of the coronary artery, it's inflated. When the balloon is inflated, it compresses the plaque and enlarges the diameter of the opening within the blood vessel. After that, the balloon is deflated and the catheters are withdrawn.

The result of this procedure is that the blood vessel is dilated, and blood can flow more easily through the (formerly narrowed) part of the coronary artery.

In some situations, a small hollow tube made of metal mesh, called a stent, is used to keep the blood vessel open after a balloon angioplasty. There are new types of stents, called drug-eluting stents, that are coated with immunosuppressants that are slowly released and help keep the blood vessel from reclosing. These new stents, a sirolimus-eluting stent (Cypher) and a paclitaxel-eluting stent (Taxus), have shown some promise for improving the long-term success of this procedure.

Bypass Graft Surgery

Bypass graft surgery was introduced as a way of treating coronary artery disease. In this operation (abbreviated as CABG and sometimes pronounced "cabbage"), cardiac surgeons remove part of the blood vessel (graft) from somewhere else in the body and attach it to a narrowed or blocked coronary artery so the muscle ordinarily supplied by the vessel can be nourished again. For many people who suffer from unremitting angina, CABG can provide dramatic relief.

The principle of bypass graft surgery is to construct a new channel so blood can get around the atherosclerotic blockages in the coronary arteries. Therefore, instead of trying to scrape out the plaques, the surgeon uses a segment of a vessel from another part of the body to transport blood to the far side of the obstruction. Usually the grafts are fashioned from one of the large, accessible saphenous veins that run down the inside of the leg, although recently there has been a trend towards using the internal mammary arteries located under the chest wall.

Electrophysiologic devices (Pacemakers)

The job of the pacemaker is to maintain a minimum safe heart rate by delivering to the pumping chambers appropriately timed electrical impulses that replace the heart's normal rhythmic pulses.

The device designed to perform this life-sustaining role consists of a power source about the size of a silver dollar (containing the battery) and, control circuits, and wires, or "leads, that connect the power source to the chambers of the heart.

The leads are placed in contact with the right atrium or the right ventricle, or both. They allow the pacemaker to sense and stimulate in various combinations, depending on where the pacing is required.

Diagnosis of Heart Disease

The diagnosis of this problem is based upon clinical history and physical exam. Confirmatory tests include electrocardiography (electrodes are connected to the chest and heart activity is monitored) and measurement of the level of serum creatine kinase enzymes released into the blood by the damaged muscle. Another method is the heart imaging technique called an angiography (injection of dye into the arteries followed by x-ray).

Symptoms of Heart Disease

In its early stages there are no symptoms. The first symptom is usually angina pectoris (chest pain) or heart attack.

Angina pectoris is discomfort or pain in the chest, typically, brought on by exertion and relieved by rest. The pain may be a dull ache in the middle of the chest or a feeling of pressure that may spread up to the neck or down the arms.

The major symptoms of a heart attack are intense chest pain, suddenly cold, sweating, weakness and nausea.

Causes and Risk Factors of Heart Disease

The primary risk factors for the development of atherosclerotic heart disease are smoking, sedentary lifestyle, hypertension, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, and a genetic predisposition to the disease.

Description of Heart Disease

The heart is a muscular pump in the chest. Throughout life it beats continuously and rhythmically to send blood to the lungs and the rest of the body.

The normal heart weighs approximately 10 1/2 ounces and is about the size of your fist. It beats 60 to 120 times a minute, depending on whether you are excited or resting.

The average blood cell makes a round trip through the body's arteries and veins every 60 seconds, and can hit speeds of up to 10 mph. The heart pumps your five quarts of blood around your body 500 times a day.

When the arteries become clogged with deposits made up of "bad" cholesterol, plaque, scar tissue, or calcium, the heart has a harder time circulating blood. This clogging causes a myriad of heart problems from angina pectoris (chest pain) to heart failure to a heart attack.

Description of Heart Disease

The heart is a muscular pump in the chest. Throughout life it beats continuously and rhythmically to send blood to the lungs and the rest of the body.

The normal heart weighs approximately 10 1/2 ounces and is about the size of your fist. It beats 60 to 120 times a minute, depending on whether you are excited or resting.

The average blood cell makes a round trip through the body's arteries and veins every 60 seconds, and can hit speeds of up to 10 mph. The heart pumps your five quarts of blood around your body 500 times a day.

When the arteries become clogged with deposits made up of "bad" cholesterol, plaque, scar tissue, or calcium, the heart has a harder time circulating blood. This clogging causes a myriad of heart problems from angina pectoris (chest pain) to heart failure to a heart attack.

Definition of Heart Disease


Heart disease is a general term that refers to any disease or condition of the heart, including coronary heart disease, hypertension, heart failure, congenital heart disease, disorders of the heart valves, heart infections, cardiomyopathy, conduction disorders, and heart arrythmias. This information item will focus on atherosclerotic changes – the changes that occur because of the build up of plaques or fatty streaks on the interior walls of the blood vessels that supply oxygenated blood to the heart muscle. This condition is also known as coronary artery disease.