Today, everyone is familiar with the term ‘heart
disease’, but not everyone is conversant with the spectrum of diseases related
to the heart. What commonly referred to as heart disease is actually a bouquet
of heart conditions with some connections and many differences. Heart ailment
is a terrible thing to dwell with. It’s dreadful. As much as it sounds
bizarre, it is heart-warming to know that this petite fist size organ can manipulate all rhythms of our lives. As a heart patient, caregiver, conceivable candidate
for heart disease, as a healthy person we must initiate to know more about the
most beautiful part of our body that works sequentially 365 days, nonstop.
Photo credit ~ irishfoundation
Heart disease talks may get intimidating more so for a non-medic like me. Having said that, I have tried to demystify it, and so this article happened
Angina, atherosclerosis, heart attack
We come across many people who often say that they are
having angina. What is this angina? Angina is simply chest discomfort,
fullness, irritability that is caused by reduced blood flow in the body.
Arteries are channels that supply blood with oxygen in the body. Arteries get
clogged and taper due to calcium and fat deposits from bad food and sickly
lifestyle. People with unstable angina show signs of discomfort
on chest, neck, arms and even stomach and need to get immediate medical help. Since our whole body is like a fish bone array of arteries, they
may get clogged elsewhere also. Likewise they are referred to as cerebral
(brain), pulmonary (lung), peripheral (limbs), renal (kidney), carotid (neck)
etc. These are all cardio vascular events. Heart attack (MI - myocardial infarction) happens when an artery is clogged completely (100% occlusion). Heart attack is a life threatening condition. After heart attack (if not treated immediately) the area gets dead requiring extra effort to keep other areas of the heart healthy.
Arrhythmias
Some people suffer from arrhythmias. Arrhythmia is abnormal irregular
heart rhythms caused by erratic electrical system in the heart. Heart may go slow,
race, skip etc. They can cause a variety of symptoms like dizziness, fatigue,
shortness of breath, blackouts, fainting and palpitations. Arrhythmias may feel
like flutters in the heart and is a very disturbing feeling. If left untreated, arrhythmias can be
life threatening. There are different kinds of arrhythmias, like, VT, SVT, AF (AFib), tachycardia,
bradycardia etc.of which only your cardiologist can guide you with.
Heart valve disease
Heart valves are shafts that control the flow of blood in
one direction only. The valves lie at the exit of each heart chamber and
maintain one way blood flow without leakage. It is important that I go into
little details here. It took me many years to understand how heart valves
function but it is not that complex after all.
The heart has four chambers. Right and left atria and
right and left ventricles. Blood flows from right and left atria into your
ventricles through the tricuspid and mitral valves. When the ventricles are
full, the tricuspid and mitral valves shut. This prevents blood from flowing
backward into the atria while the ventricles contract. As the ventricles begin to
contract, the pulmonic and aortic valves are forced open and blood is pumped
out of the ventricles. Blood from the right ventricle passes through the open
pulmonic valve into the pulmonary artery,
and blood from the left ventricle passes through the aortic valve into the aorta and the rest of the
body. This pattern is repeated over and over with each heartbeat, causing blood
to flow continuously to the heart, lungs and the body.
Heart valve disease can develop at or before birth (congenital) or
can be acquired sometime during one's lifetime. Children often acquire inflammation of the valve, holes in the heart (ASD, VSA), etc.
which sometimes remain undetected until adulthood. Valve disease is mostly caused by untreated rheumatic
fevers caused by bacterial infection in childhood. Valve problems are characterized by weakness,
extreme lethargy, shortness of breath swelling of ankle, joints, feet. .
Heart failure
Heart failures are extreme conditions when our heart slows
down and fails to pump good blood to the whole body. Heart failure is a
chronic, progressive condition in which the heart muscle is unable to pump
enough blood through to meet the body's needs for blood and oxygen. This
can be due to thickening (hypetrophic cardiomyopathy), restricting (restrictive cardiomyopathy), enlarging (dilated cardiomyopathy) of the heart, heart muscles
or the heart sac. Heart failure is a serious condition that needs long term treatment and in many cases inspite of optimum medical help patients do not survive.
Heart conditions are triggered by uncontrolled blood pressure,
chronic diabetes, kidney disease, high levels of bad cholesterol (low HDL), unhealthy eating habits (binge
eating and excess sugar, high carb and less nutrient dense diet), smoking, obesity, sedentary and
erratic way of life. Although by modifying these we may achieve a heart
safe body, we can never be sure.
Photo credit ~ irishfoundation
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