Monday, July 30, 2007

Is There a Cure for Heart Disease?

Heart disease is a very generic term for a number of different diseases, all of which affect the heart in some way. Heart disease is considered as the leading cause of death in the United States today. The most common forms of heart disease are: coronary heart disease, ischaemic heart disease, pulmonary heart disease, hereditary heart disease, hypertensive heart disease, inflammatory heart disease, and valvular heart disease.

The first stages of heart disease tend to be lesions and cracks which form in the blood vessel walls, normally at the points of highest pressure or stress, and then the second stage is the body trying to repair itself, and it does this by depositing fatty substances such as cholesterol and lipoproteins inside the blood vessel walls in order to fill the cracks.

The symptoms of heart disease will vary depending on what particular type of heart disease it is, and unfortunately, some types of heart disease actually have no signs or symptoms at all and so they can go unnoticed and thus become incredibly more dangerous as a result.

Cure for Heart Disease:

Although there are many different forms of treatment for heart disease in today’s world, but there is no definite cure for heart disease as yet. There are theories which have been put towards the cure for heart disease and considered as possibly being the cure for heart disease, however none have been perfected yet.

Cellular therapy, for instance, is considered as being a possible cure for heart disease. This is because cellular products have been shown to hold great potential for the treating of damaged and diseased tissues in the body, and they come in a variety of sources, such as stem cells from bone marrow and peripheral blood, as well as from myoblasts from skeletal muscle cells.

Cellular therapy for treating heart disease is becoming a growing field of clinical research, and potential cell treatments for patients with congestive heart failure and ischemic heart disease. These methods are of great interest to medical researchers as well as to treating physicians.

The research to date has shown that cellular therapy offers incredibly positive results. With further research this just may be the answer for heart disease cure in the near future. There are also various other forms of treatment that are held in as high standards as this cellular therapy, and only by completing further research and investigations will one be able to come out on top.

Check out the following two credible resources on keeping your HEART fit and healthy.

  1. How to Prevent and Even Reverse HEART DISEASE Without Drugs or Surgery.

  2. Heart Secrets Revealed - How to Save Your Life from Cardiovascular Disease Without Drugs & Surgery.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

About Cholesterol and Heart Disease

High cholesterol can cause serious problem to one’s health, and it can cause atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries, this can in turn leads to blocked coronary arteries, manifested by chest pain, or a heart attack. Other serious problems such as blocked arteries to the brain, for instance, can result in a stroke, while blocked arteries in the legs can cause pain, limping and even disability.

To understand the connection between heart disease and cholesterol better, there are few other things that need to be understood first.

First, what Cholesterol is…

Cholesterol is a fatty and wax-like substance that is naturally present in the human body, and your body uses this cholesterol in order to produce many different hormones, such as Vitamin D and the bile acids that help to digest fat. Although a certain amount of cholesterol is natural, if you have too much in your bloodstream then the excess may be deposited in the arteries of the heart, which in turn can lead to heart disease.

How to Prevent a Cholesterol and Heart Disease Problem:

Adopting a healthy lifestyle is the best thing you can do to prevent high cholesterol and heart disease problems. This means making sure that you eat the healthy and nutritious foods, and do exercise on a regular basis. Also stay away from smoking and excessive drinking of alcohol.

Healthy lifestyle and diet will almost guarantee a lower cholesterol, but if this does not work, then this is when medication is needed. Even if your doctor does prescribe a medication, you still have to follow your healthy lifestyle, be more physically active, stop cigarette smoking if you smoke and control other various risk factors, such as high blood pressure and diabetes for instance.

There are some risk factors which you are simply unable to control, such as your age and your family history, but by doing everything that you can, you will greatly reduce your risk of having high cholesterol and heart disease.

Hope this information is useful.

Check out this great book by Dr. Robert D. Willix Jr. “How to prevent and even reverse heart disease”.

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Child Heart Disease

Heart disease is a very important and serious issue, and it is very surprising that many people are not aware that children can also suffer from heart disease. Child heart disease is actually quite a common ailment across the world, and congenital heart disease is actually one of the most common birth defects of all, affecting nearly one percent of all babies born.

Many of these infants are first diagnosed with child heart disease when their pediatrician hears a heart murmur on a routine examination.

Information on Child Heart Disease:

For the most part how child heart disease works is that their heart can have a small abnormality that may or may not be noticeable at birth, and generally if there is a hole in the heart wall that lets blood travel from one side to the other then the baby will have blue lips or fingers.

There are also other problems which may be involved here, such as an abnormal heart valve, and this may result in allowing blood to flow the wrong way, and this is a problem which will usually require surgery once the child is older. While most are, some heart problems in children are not congenital, and so it is something that can never really be expected.

What a Heart Murmur is?

A heart murmur is a noise that the blood makes as it flows through the heart, and it is sort of like the noise that water makes when it flows through a hose. Heart murmurs are common in children, some which are harmless, and others which are not.

Because a heart murmur is one of the most common signs of child heart disease, most parents get frantic at the term. However a lot of the time heart murmurs actually do not mean that there is anything wrong with your child, and these heart murmurs are known as being ‘innocent’ or ‘functional’.

For the times that a heart murmur does actually indicate a problem with your child’s heart, this is when there is a hole in the heart, a leak in the heart valve, or a narrow heart valve. If your doctor suspects that there is a problem, then the first thing they will do is refer you to a pediatric cardiologist, which is a doctor who specializes in child heart disease. The cardiologist will do an examination and do tests in order to find out whether there is actually a problem or not.

Learn All About Heart Secrets Here - A Self Help Guide Without Drugs & Surgery.

Understanding the Causes of Heart Disease

Heart disease is not actually a single disease, but rather it is a complex of diseases of varied etiology. There are a number of different causes of heart disease, including for instance damage to the heart muscle or valves due to a congenital defect, as well as inflammation and damage associated with various viral, bacterial, fungal or parasitic diseases.

Rheumatic fever and syphilis are other ailments that are also considered as contributors to or causes of heart disease, as can genetic or autoimmune disorders in which cellular proteins in the heart muscle are deranged or which disrupt enzymes affecting cardiac function.

More About the Causes of Heart Disease:

There are also a variety of other causes of heart disease, including: atherosclerosis, dermatomyositis, diabetes, Friedrich’s ataxia, hemochromatosis, high cholesterol, hypertension, Kawasaki disease, menopause, Paget’s disease of bone, physical inactivity, smoking, type 1 and 2 diabetes, and being underweight or overweight.

It is important to understand that the factors that are considered as being able to initiate a heart attack are really twofold, with one being the pathological buildup of abnormal plaque, in the arteries, plaque that gradually hardens through calcification. However this abnormal plaque should not be confused with the fatty streaks and thickening that is found in the arteries of both primitive and industrialized peoples throughout the world.

After all without this natural thickening the arteries would end up weakening in those areas as the body aged, and this would result in leading to aneurysms and ruptures. The other half involves the blood clot or thrombus that blocks blood flow to the heart or the brain. Inflammation is also able to cause blockages, and in fact, an entirely new view of coronary artery disease is that it is an inflammatory process which is characterized particularly by cycles of irritation, injury, healing and reinjury inside of the blood vessels.

It is very important and beneficial to understand the causes of heart disease because then you can try to prevent it as much as possible. Although heart disease is basically unavoidable, there are certain things that you can do to protect yourself against it as much as possible, namely eating a healthy and nutritious diet and making sure that you get plenty of physical activity.

By keeping yourself healthy, you will not only protect yourself against heart disease but from other ailments and health conditions as well, and so it is beneficial in many more ways than one.

Want to keep your heart healthy? Check out this book by Dr. Robert D. Willix Jr.

How to prevent and even reverse heart disease”.

Friday, July 20, 2007

Important Facts About Heart Disease

The term heart disease is a very general term, please note that there are many different types of hears disease. For examples, there are coronary artery disease, pulmonary heart disease, congestive heart failure and angina. There are many different facts about heart disease that are important to know, regardless of whether or not you yourself have developed a heart disease.

Facts About Heart Disease:

The first important fact you need to know about heart disease is the alarming statistics. For instance, there are 50 million people suffer from high blood pressure, 12 million suffer from coronary heart disease, 6.2 million suffer from angina pectoris, 7 million suffer from heart attacks, 4.4 million suffer from strokes, 1.8 million suffer from rheumatic heart disease/fever, and 1 million suffer from congenital cardiovascular defects in the United States.

As well, of the 50 Americans who have high blood pressure 35 percent do not even know they have it, about every 29 seconds an American will suffer from a coronary event, at least 250,000 people each year die of heart attacks before they reach the hospital, half of all heart attack victims wait more than two hours before getting help, and cardiovascular diseases are the number one killer of both men and women.

Another important facts about heart disease you need to know is the actual causes of heart disease. The most major cause is a thickening of the inside walls of the coronary arteries, and this thickening narrows the space through which blood can flow, thus decreasing and sometimes even completely blocking the supply of oxygen to the heart.

High blood pressure and high cholesterol are also considered as being major causes of heart disease, and on average, each of these actually doubles your chances of developing heart disease at some point in your lifetime. Obesity and inactivity are two other factors which are likely to cause heart disease, and being overweight especially increases the likelihood of you developing some type of heart disease.

Learning about the facts of heart disease is incredibly important, even if you have not yet developed heart disease because then you will be more informed and knowledgeable and you will be able to best protect yourself against getting heart disease in the future. Although there is no surefire way of preventing yourself from developing heart disease, by maintaining a healthy and active lifestyle you can guard yourself against it and other heart and health conditions, and thus you will be benefiting yourself in more ways than one.

We will be adding more information about heart disease in this blog as time goes by… so please check back often.

In the mean time, check out this book “How to prevent and even reverse heart disease” by Dr. Robert D. Willix Jr.