Heart Disease Guide

Important Heart Disease Facts & Resources

Heart Disease Information

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Heart disease and stroke are mainly consequences of atherosclerosis and high blood pressure (hypertension). Heart disease is sometimes included in the broader category of atherosclerotic and hypertensive diseases. Risk factors for heart disease and stroke have been well established for many years. Distinct from age, family history, and possible genetic determinants are modifiable risk factors that cause heart attacks and strokes, including high blood cholesterol, high blood pressure, smoking, and diabetes. Behaviors that contribute to development of risk factors for heart disease, partly by causing obesity, include adverse dietary patterns and physical inactivity.

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Social and environmental conditions that may determine such behavioral patterns, in turn, include education and income, cultural influences, family and personal habits, and opportunities to make favorable choices.For example, dietary patterns result from the influences of food production policies, marketing practices, product availability, cost, convenience, knowledge, choices that affect health, and preferences that are often based on early-life habits. Because many aspects of behavior are clearly beyond the control of the individual, the scope of heart disease and Stroke and stroke prevention, from the public health perspective, extends far beyond the individual or the patient. Thus, a comprehensive public health strategy for heart disease prevention must address the broader determinants of risk and disease burden as they affect both the population as a whole and particular groups of special concern, including those determinants that make healthier choices more likely for defeating heart disease.

Heart Failure: A Companion to Braunwald's Heart Disease

I. Basic Mechanisms of Heart Failure

Chapter 1:
Evolving Concepts in the Pathophysiology of Heart Failure - Arnold Katz

Chapter 2:
Molecular Basis for Heart Failure - Seigo Izumo & William Pu

Chapter 3:
Myocyte Abnormalities in the Human Heart Failure - Kenneth B. Margulies & Steven R. Houser

Chapter 4:
Myocardial Basis for Heart Failure: Role of the Cardiac Interstitium - Sajeevani K. Gunasinghe & Francis G. Spinale

Chapter 5:
Myocardial Basis for Heart Failure: Role of Cell Death - Piero Anversa, Annarosa Leri & Jan Kajstura

Chapter 6:
Energetic Basis for Heart Failure - Joanne S. Ingwall

Chapter 7:
Role of the Peripheral Circulation and Endothelial Cell Dysfunction - Helmut Drexler & Burkhard Hornig

II. Mechanisms of Disease Progression in Heart Failure

Chapter 8: Heart Failure as a Progressive Disease -Douglas L. Mann

Chapter 9: Activation of the Renin-Angiotensin System in Human Cardiac Hypertrophy and Heart Failure - Louis J. Dell?Italia & Karim Sabri

Chapter 10: Adrenergic Receptor Signaling in Chronic Heart Failure - J. David Port, Jennifer Linseman & Michael R. Bristow

Chapter 11: Activation of Inflammatory Mediators in Heart Failure - Douglas L. Mann

Chapter 12: Oxidative Stress in Heart Failure - Douglas B. Sawyer & Wilson S. Colucci

Chapter 13: Systolic Dysfunction in Heart Failure -David A. Kass

Chapter 14: Alterations in Ventricular Function: Diastolic Heart Failure - Michael R. Zile & Catalin F. Baicu

Chapter 15: Alterations in Ventricular Structure: Role of Left Ventricular Remodeling - Inder S. Anand & Viorel G. Florea

Chapter 16: Alterations in the Sympathetic And Parasympathetic Nervous System in
Heart Failure - John S. Floras

Chapter 17: Kidney in Heart Failure: The Cardiorenal Axis in the Regulation of Sodium Homeostasis - John C. Burnett, Jr., Lisa Costello & Guido Boerrigter

Chapter 18: Alterations in the Skeletal Muscle In Heart Failure - Thierry H. Le Jemtel, Maryjane Farr & Robert Moskowitz

Chapter 19: Alterations in Pulmonary and Diaphragmatic Function in Heart Failure - Donna M. Mancini & Chim C. Lang

Chapter 20: Myocardial Energy Metabolism In Heart Failure - Heinrich Taegtmeyer, Peter Razeghi & Martin E. Young

III. Etiological Basis for Heart Failure

Chapter 21: Update of the Epidemiology of Heart Failure - William B. Kanel & RS Vasan

Chapter 22: Heart Failure as a Consequence Of Atherosclerotic Coronary Artery Disease - Mihai Gheorghiade & Robert O. Bonow

Chapter 23: Heart Failure as a Consequence Of Dilated Cardiomyopathy - Biykem Bozkurt & Douglas L. Mann

Chapter 24: Heart Failure as a Consequence Of Genetic Cardiomyopathy - Jeffrey A. Towbin & N.E. Bowles

Chapter 25: Heart Failure as a Consequence Of Hypertension - Thomas D. Giles

Chapter 26: Valvular Heart Disease and Heart Failure - Blase A. Carabello


Chapter 27: Heart Failure as a Consequence Of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy - A. J. Mariann & Robert Roberts

Chapter 28: Heart Failure as a Consequence Of Peripartum Cardiomyopathy - Dennis M. McNamara & Arthur Feldman

Chapter 29: Recent Advances in Viral Myocarditis Leading to Dilated Cardiomyopathy - Peter Liu, Dante Cerullo, Tej Sheth & Mary Anne Opavsky

IV. Clinical Ass essment of Heart Failure

Chapter 30: Sleep-Related Breathing Disorders In Heart Failure - Sharokh Javaheri

Chapter 31: The Prognosis of Heart Failure - James B. Young

Chapter 32: Clinical Evaluation of Heart Failure - Gary S. Francis & W.H. Wilson Tang

Chapter 33: Electrophysiologic Evaluation Of Patients with Heart Failure - William Stevenson

Chapter 34: Clinical Trial Design in Heart Failure - John Teerlink
V. Therapy for Heart Failure

Chapter 35: Development and Implementation of Heart Failure Practice Guidelines - Kirkwood F. Adams, Jr.

Chapter 36: Management of Acute Decompensation - Lynne Warner Stevenson

Chapter 37: Management of Volume Overload In Heart Failure - Stephen Gottlieb

Chapter 38: Antagonism of the Renin-Angiotensin System in Heart Failure - Marvin A. Konstam & Richard D. Patten

Chapter 39: Antagonism of the β-Adrenergic Receptors in Heart Failure Patients - Eric J. Eichhorn & Michael R. Bristow

Chapter 40: Emerging Strategies in the Treatment of Chronic Heart Failure - Anita Deswal, William R. MacLellan, Philip Barger & Douglas L. Mann

Chapter 41: Management of Thrombosis In Heart Failure - John G.F. Cleland

Chapter 42: Arrhythmias in Heart Failure And Cardiomyopathy - Philip J. Podrid

Chapter 43: Cardiac Transplantation - Guillermo Torre-Amione, Michael Koerner, Kevin Lisman & Vinay Thohan

Chapter 44: Surgical Treatment of Chronic Congestive Heart Failure - Randall C. Starling, Patrick M. McCarthy & Mohamad H. Yamani

Chapter 45: Mechanical Circulatory Support In Patients with Heart Failure - Reynolds M. Delgado, III, O.H. Frazier, Peter Razeghi & Heinrich Taegtmeyer

Chapter 46: Exercise in Heart Failure: A Review of Current Applications for Testing And Training - Ileana L. Piña & Jose Ortiz

Author: CHEST
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Health Info Advocate for Heart Disease Information

Scott Parat has compiled and placed these pages on the web for the benefit of anyone suffering from heart disease. Scott has been involved in the health field for the last 20 years and focuses much of his attention toward natural solutions to health problems.

Heart Attack Symtoms

The National Heart Attack Alert Program notes these major signs of a heart attack: Chest discomfort. Most heart attacks involve discomfort in the center of the chest that lasts for more than a few minutes, or goes away and comes back. The discomfort can feel like uncomfortable pressure, squeezing, fullness, or pain.

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Discomfort in other areas of the upper body. Can include pain or discomfort in one or both arms, the back, neck, jaw, or stomach.

  • A Change of Heart: How the Framingham Heart Study Helped Unravel the Mysteries of Cardiovascular Disease

    NEW YORK -- Women who develop preeclampsia should be counseled about the risk in subsequent gestations and strategies to contain these risks, according to Baha M. Sibai, M.D.

    In addition, more general implications about health in later life should be discussed with the patient, said Dr. Sibai, who is professor and chairman of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Cincinnati.

    He made his report at an obstetrics symposium sponsored by Columbia University and New York Presbyterian Hospital.

    About 20%-30% of women who have had an episode of preeclampsia will develop t ...
    Author: Science News
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  • Heart disease and stroke
    ...
    Author: Ebony
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