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In today's avalanche of medical information, how can you distinguish between proven evidence and unfounded claims? This is the first book to translate key medical data into clear guidelines capturing the highest treatment standards for heart disease. Renowned cardiovascular expert Dr. Harlan Krumholz presents seven strategies for reducing cardiac risk - what professionals agree really works. In this indispensable handbook, he also profiles care alternatives from supplements to stress reduction as well as treatments on the horizon. A "Tools for Success" section helps you track blood pressure, cholesterol, exercise, and weight.
The human heart is an astonishing organ. A muscle only about the size of your fist, it sits just to the left of the center of your chest contracting and relaxing to pump blood -- roughly five liters of it a minute -- throughout your body. It is an involuntary muscle. Unlike, for example, the muscles in your arm that you flex voluntarily when you lift something, your heart needs no instruction. It operates independently and continuously, day and night, week in, week out, year after year. When it stops, life stops.
What Is Heart Disease?
The heart is tough, but it's not invulnerable and it can be afflicted by a variety of diseases. But what's commonly called heart disease (though, more accurately known as "coronary artery disease") is, interestingly enough, not a disease of the heart at all. At least not directly. It's a disease of the large arteries outside the heart that supply the smaller vessels that feed the heart muscle with blood rich in nutrients and oxygen that the heart needs to keep working. Other vessels carry away the waste products produced by the heart in the course of its work. Coronary arteries, the large arteries carrying blood to the heart muscle, are like the huge pipes that carry water from a reservoir to a big city, to be distributed to streets, individual houses, and then specific faucets before being carried away again through drains. If something happens to those big pipes that blocks the flow of vital water to the city, the city shuts down in no time at all. Your heart needs an open system of pipes to maintain an unabated flow of blood all the time.
When the heart works harder, such as during exertion or stress, it needs even more blood flow. It gets this greater flow because, unlike water pipes, the blood vessels can dilate, or open larger, when the need arises. When something impedes that flow, it causes immediate problems for the heart muscle, which becomes starved of oxygen and nutrients.
With heart disease, the "something" that restricts the flow is an accumulation of fatty deposits -- including cholesterol -- that form thick "plaques" on the interior walls of the coronary arteries, a process that can slow the flow of blood to the heart. This condition, called atherosclerosis, occurs gradually and may go unnoticed for years.
What Are the Symptoms of Heart Disease?
When atherosclerosis is advanced, the flow of blood can be reduced enough that when the heart is asked to work harder than usual -- for example, when you're exercising or climbing stairs, or simply digesting a heavy meal -- it can't get the blood flow that it needs.
Typically, the heart signals that it's struggling by producing a feeling of chest discomfort, a condition that doctors call angina. Angina can take many forms; the sensations can include weakness, heaviness, pressure, tightness, and even pain in the middle of the chest. People with angina may also feel this discomfort at some distance from the heart -- in the arms, abdomen, back, neck, and lower jaw, for example. Angina is simply the heart's way of saying there is a mismatch between the oxygen-rich blood flow it needs and what is actually arriving for its use. Usually, if you have this symptom, the discomfort goes away when you stop whatever activity is causing your heart to work harder than usual (or, if you've already been diagnosed with angina, when you take medication, such as nitroglycerin tablets or spray). You should also know that not everyone has this feeling when there is a problem with blood flow to the heart, but it usually is an important signal when it occurs.
If you experience any symptoms in the checklist below, you should let your doctor know because they could be indications of heart disease. These symptoms are not always caused by heart disease; they may be harmless or due to other medical conditions. But if you already have heart disease, these symptoms are enough to indicate a potential heart problem and reason enough for you to check with your doctor, especially if these symptoms are new.
Sometimes, however, the danger signal from the heart is more dramatic. Atherosclerosis causes plaques to accumulate in the coronary arteries. These plaques are lumps and bumps within the coronary arteries that can contain cholesterol, white blood cells, and other substances. Sometimes they grow to block the arteries and sometimes they are small and do not affect the blood flow ...
The Expert Guide to Beating Heart Disease
Overview
In today's avalanche of medical information, how can you distinguish between proven evidence and unfounded claims? This is the first book to translate key medical data into clear guidelines capturing the highest treatment standards for heart disease. Renowned cardiovascular expert Dr. Harlan Krumholz presents seven strategies for reducing cardiac risk - what professionals agree really works. In this indispensable handbook, he also profiles care alternatives from supplements to stress reduction as well as treatments on the horizon. A "Tools for Success" section helps you track blood pressure, cholesterol, exercise, and weight.