Homoeopathy & Heart Blockage
1. Homoeopathic
Materia Metica for Heart Blockage
2. Homoeopathic
Repertory for Heart Blockage
3. Homoeopathic
therapeutics for Heart Blockage
4. Cases
Illustrated
5. Latest
Developments
6. Auther’s
Continuation
A blockage in the heart's arteries may reduce or
completely cut off the blood supply to a portion of the heart.
This can cause a blood clot to form and totally stop blood flow
in a coronary artery, resulting in a heart attack (also called
an acute myocardial infarction or MI).
Irreversible injury to the heart muscle usually
occurs if medical help is not received promptly. Unfortunately,
it is common for people to dismiss heart attack symptoms.
The American Heart Association and other medical
experts say the body likely will send one or more of these
warning signals of a heart attack:
· Uncomfortable
pressure, fullness, squeezing or pain in the center of the chest
lasting more than a few minutes.
· Pain
spreading to the shoulders, neck or arms. The pain may be mild
to intense. It may feel like pressure, tightness, burning, or
heavy weight. It may be located in the chest, upper abdomen,
neck, jaw, or inside the arms or shoulders.
· Chest
discomfort with lightheadedness, fainting, sweating, nausea or
shortness of breath.
· Anxiety,
nervousness and/or cold, sweaty skin.
· Paleness
or pallor.
· Increased
or irregular heart rate.
· Feeling
of impending doom.
The actual diagnosis of a heart attack must be
made by a doctor who has studied the results of several tests.
The doctor may:
· Review
the patient's complete medical history.
· Give
a physical examination.
· Use
an electrocardiogram (or EKG) to discover any abnormalities
caused by damage to the heart.
· Use
a blood test to detect abnormal levels of certain enzymes in the
bloodstream.
What does heart-related chest pain feel like?
By
William R. Ladd, M.D., Director of Nuclear Cardiology,
Cardiovascular Institute of the South
If you suffer chest pain, particularly while
exercising, you will almost certainly wonder whether it might be
heart-related - and well you should. Heart muscle pain - angina
- is likely to be the first warning of blocked coronary
arteries, the cause of most heart attacks.
While there are no infallible guidelines about
whether a chest pain is heart-related, it generally takes a
particular form. Heart discomfort is rarely a sharp, stabbing
pain. The textbook description of angina is a feeling of
heaviness, pressure, tightness or aching in the chest, usually
accompanied by shortness of breath. The pain generally goes away
when you stop exerting yourself, and it frequently isn't
especially severe, which is, perhaps, unfortunate.
Even a heart attack may not be unbearably painful
at first, permitting its victim to delay seeking treatment for
as much as four to six hours after its onset. By then, the heart
may have suffered irreversible damage. It is not unknown for
patients to drive themselves to emergency rooms with what proved
to be very serious and even fatal heart attacks.
Angina is a protest from the heart muscle that it
isn't getting enough oxygen because of diminished blood supply.
A heart attack is simply the most extreme state of oxygen
deprivation, in which whole regions of heart muscle cells begin
to die for lack of oxygen. If the blockage in the arteries
serving the heart muscle can be cleared quickly enough - within
the first few hours of the onset of the attack - the permanent
damage can be held to a minimum.
That's why it is so vital to seek medical
attention quickly if you feel the sort of pressing pain or
heaviness described above. There is a 90 percent probability
that pain of this type is angina. And even if it goes away, the
artery blockages that caused it are still there and will grow
progressively worse.
Ignoring this sort of pain because it is not
unbearable or because it goes away is the worst thing you can
do. It is the only warning you are likely to get of a
potentially lethal condition. Heed it! Consult a cardiologist
immediately.
You can have a heart attack without knowing it
By William R. Condos, Jr., M.D., Medical
Director, Cardiovascular Institute of the South/Lake Charles
The nation's longest-running heart study suggests
that about one heart attack in four produces no symptoms - or at
least none that the victim associates with a heart problem.
These so-called "silent heart attacks," however,
are only the most extreme case of a still more prevalent
condition called "silent schemia" - a chronic shortage of oxygen
- and nutrient-bearing blood to a portion of the heart. Both
conditions put their victims at significant risk.
The cause of ischemia, silent or otherwise, is almost always
atherosclerosis - the progressive narrowing of the heart's
arteries from accumulations of cholesterol plaque. In most
instances, this reduction in blood supply generates a protest
from the heart - the crushing pain called angina. But in perhaps
25 to 30 percent of heart attack victims, there were no previous
symptoms of these
gradually developing blockages. The Framingham Heart Study,
which followed 4,000 Massachusetts men for more than 40 years,
found that 25 percent of their subjects' heart attacks go
unnoticed until their annual EKGs detect their after-effects.
The absence of pain, however, doesn't mean an
absence of damage. The heart has a built-in reserve capacity,
allowing it to suffer a certain amount of scarring and weakening
from a heart attack and continue to meet the body's needs. But
further ischemia or another heart attack, even a mild to
moderate one, may prove fatal because that reserve capacity is
no longer there. Even those who survive another heart attack are
at increased risk of becoming cardiac cripples, disabled by
congestive heart failure or arrhythmias heartbeat
irregularities.
There is no way of predicting absolutely who is a
candidate for silent ischemia, but statistically, the greater
the number of risk factors or coronary artery disease that you
have, the more likely you are to be a candidate. Those risk
factors include some you can't control - your age, sex and
genetic predisposition to atherosclerosis - and those you can
influence, like diabetes, high blood pressure, high blood
cholesterol, smoking, lack of exercise and obesity.
As a rule of thumb, I would urge you to undergo a
screening for silent ischemia if you have any three of these
factors working against you - a man over age 50 who smokes, or a
post-menopausal woman with a ten-year history of diabetes and
chronic unfavorable blood cholesterol levels, for instance.
The screening for undetected ischemia is a
medical history and physical examination and a cardiac stress
test - a workout on a treadmill while your heart function is
monitored.
It's a simple, painless and inexpensive way to
learn whether the beating of your heart is accompanied by the
inaudible ticking of an atherosclerosis time