Heart Disease

Types of Heart
Disease
Coronary Artery
Disease
Coronary Artery
Disease or CAD also known
as atherosclerosis is the main type of
heart disease. Arteries of the heart are blocked or have
restricted blood flow to the heart muscle. Generally the
arteries are blocked or restricted from oxidized and/or
calcified cholesterol or blood clots. CAD or atherosclerosis is
the leading cause of heart attack.
Cholesterol itself is not
bad (it is essential to life), it's when the cholesterol binds
to the arterial walls and hardens it becomes a problem.
Cholesterol is the main culprit according to the medical
establishment, but this does not explain the FACT that 50% of
heart attacks occur to individuals with "normal" cholesterol
levels. Statins, the "popular" pharmaceuticals profusely
prescribed by doctors is finally being exposed as the farce
that they are - the side effects actually make things worse for
the patients - depleting CoQ10 (Co-enzyme Q10) which if
depleted to 75% will in itself cause a heart to stop beating.
When cholesterol is too low, it causes strokes!
Big 4 heart disease
markers:
-
lipoprotein(a) -
(hereditary condition)
-
C-reactive protein - (inflamation marker)
-
homocysteine - methionine breakdown
byproduct
-
fibrinogen - blood coagulation
Lipoprotein(a) Lp(a) a
hereditary factor (thick blood). High Lp(a) predicts risk of
early atherosclerosis similar to high LDL, but in advanced
atherosclerosis, Lp(a) is an independent risk factor not
dependent on LDL.
Homocysteine levels are a
better marker for heart disease than cholesterol levels.
Homocysteine causes tiny pits in arterial walls and sets up
cholesterol traps which form a plaque (hardened cholesterol
patches) buildup. To control homocycteine levels, one needs to
supplement with folate, B-6 and B-12. The mass marketed
multivitamins and minerals are worthless as they are synthetic
(not natural forms) of vitamins and crushed rock minerals (you
can't absorb a rock). Only natural food based vitamins and
minerals are absorbed and benefit the body.
C-reactive protein or CRP
is another important heart disease marker, more so than
cholesterol. C-reactive protein shows inflamation levels in the
body.
Fibrinogen levels
determine how easily blood coagulates. High levels indicate
that ones blood clots easily.
Angina
Angina is discomfort or chest pain associated
with restricted blood flow to the heart muscle. It is
essentially a symptom of atherosclerosis or coronary heart
disease. Angina can have all the symptoms of a heart attack -
chest pain, arm pain, neck pain, shoulder pain, jaw pain, back
pain, sweating or indigestion. Severe pain associated with
angina is called angina pectoris. These symptoms are usually
brought on by digestion of a heavy meal, exposure to cold,
physical exertion and/or excitement all of which increase the
blood flow demand on the heart.
Heart Arrhythmias
Heart arrhythmia, heart arhythmia or heart
arrythmia is a fluctuation or variation of the heart beat.
Common arhythmias are racing heartbeat or fluttering heart
rhythm. Usually not a serious health issue. A person may feel
out of breath, faint or dizzy. A cause is not always known but
it can be brought on by an electrolyte / mineral imbalance or
mineral deficiency - sodium/potasium or calcium/magnesium.
Heart Attack - Myocardial
Infarction (M.I.)
A heart attack is caused by a severe
restriction or blockage of the heart's blood flow for 20
minutes or more. The blockage or restriction is either a blood
clot, a cholesterol blockage (possibly a broken free clump of
cholesterol) or constriction and blockage of one or many heart
arteries. At the first sign of a heart attack one should call
or have someone call 911 and the individual should take a
aspirin right away to thin the blood. Often taking an aspirin
can lessen the damage to the heart by thinning the blood and
allowing some blood flow that might not otherwise happen.
The symptoms of a heart attack are similar to
angina, but more severe. Once an area of the heart muscle has
been without adequate blood flow, the muscle starts to die.
This can upset the heart's electrical activity causing
ventricular fibrillation or twitching of the muscle which takes
place instead of a steady and effectively pumping heart beat.
When ventricular fibrillation occurs, blood flow is interupted
and CPR must be performed until a normal heartbeat can be
re-established, usually by electrical shock from a defibulator
or defibrillator.
Congestive Heart
Failure
Congestive Heart Failure is when the heart does
not pump sufficient amounts of blood to the rest of the body.
The body's organs do not receive an adequate blood supply to
function. Causes can be heart attack, old age, fluid retention
surrounding the heart (putting pressure on the heart and
lungs), lack of essential nutrients to allow the heart to
function or poisoning / toxicity, faulty heart valve or long
term high blood pressure.
Reversing Heart
Disease
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