Posts Tagged ‘stroke’

Hypertension

High blood pressure or hypertension is a risk factor in the development of coronary heart disease. In most cases it is genetic, but can be prevented by leading a healthy life and taking the right medicine.

Angina pectoris, is chemic heart disease, stroke or sudden death myocarditis, among others, are some of the diseases caused by this disease.

These diseases are the leading cause of death worldwide, accounting for more than 7 million deaths per year, and hypertension affects about one billion people worldwide, representing 20% of the adult population .

Prevention:

Years ago it was believed that appeared only in adults, but this disease can affect all ages. It is important to diagnose early and maintain a controlled hypertensive patients through regular blood pressure.

Then, when diagnosed hypertension is essential to reorient their continued lifestyle in a more healthy as quitting smoking, losing weight, exercise, good diet, eating less salt and fat, reduce alcohol consumption and follow a suitable mediation as prescribed by your doctor.

Treatment:

It is important to treat hypertension with drugs as a cornerstone in cardiovascular protection through monotherapies or combination therapies. Traditional medicines have side effects such as diabetes, elevated triglycerides and cholesterol. In contrast, the new drugs are almost neutral, ie they have fewer side effects.

Remember to check with your doctor and always follow the advice given.

Weight loss supplements can affect your heart

A study conducted by Dr. Mehdi Razavi, the Texas Heart Institute, concludes that three quarters of weight-loss supplements bought over the Internet proved to contain ingredients that could cause lethal arrhythmias.

The experts involved in the study evaluated 12 dietary supplements and found that eight had at least one ingredient linked to dangerous heart complications such as ventricular arrhythmia, stroke and sudden death.

While all products included a list of its components, none had a warning about the potential adverse cardiac effects, thus obscuring customers the dangers of these pills to lose weight.

“Consumers have a false sense of security when they use them,” said Dr. Mehdi Razavi, the Texas Heart Institute, who presented the findings at a meeting of the Heart Rhythm Society in San Francisco.
Many heart attack people assume that the FDA supports the safety and efficacy of supplements but supplements, including many weight loss products are not subject to the same security controls that the drugs by the Food and Drug United States (FDA).

Razavi not provide the names of the pills tested, but offered a list of hazardous ingredients found in such supplements.
The team even found a compound, a type of ephedra known as Ma Huang root, which is banned by the FDA since 2004. Potentially risky ingredients are the result of Ma Huang, a type of ephedra banned by the FDA since 2004, the bitter orange, also known as Synephrine HCl and Citrus aurantium, green tea, also known as Camellia sinensis and black wheat, buckwheat or Korean ginseng, among others.

Some of the chemicals found can cause problems by reducing the levels of potassium, which could alter the heart’s electrical system. Others, such as green tea, are harmless when consumed in normal amounts, but can amplify the effects of other ingredients.

So when you decide to take a product or thermogenic fat burner is best to check with your doctor to evaluate possible consequences of its use against the benefits you could achieve.

Vitamins B and Heart Attack

Vitamins  BOne study suggests that taking vitamins B did not prevent heart attack and stroke (CVA) in people with heart disease or risk factors.

The results, according to eight clinical trials on more than 24,000 people, support the recommendations against the use of vitamins B to prevent heart disease.

The idea that the B vitamins, like folic acid, B-6 and B-12, help prevent cardiac complications from the fact that lower blood levels of an amino acid called homocysteine.

Homocysteine levels increase in people with atherosclerosis, which is the buildup of plaque in the arteries that cause heart attacks and strokes.

But researchers do not know whether high homocysteine levels promote the progression of atherosclerosis or are only an indicator of cardiac risk. No clinical trial showed that vitamin B supplements prevent heart attack and stroke.

To strengthen the evidence, the new review collected data from eight clinical trials on the effects of folic acid, vitamins B-6 and B-12 or combinations thereof.

The trials included 24,210 people with established cardiovascular disease (atherosclerosis or previous stroke or other cardiac complications) or their risk factors, such as diabetes, hypertension or high cholesterol.

The authors found that adding supplements to conventional medical therapy did not lower the risk of heart attack, stroke or death of participants in the seven years of monitoring.

The results appear in the Cochrane Library, a publication of the Cochrane Collaboration, which is an international organization that evaluates medical research.

The review provides “solid evidence” that these B vitamins do not prevent heart problems and stroke, told Reuters Health Dr. Arthur J. Marti-Carvajal, Iberoamerican Cochrane Network, in Valencia, Venezuela.

The recommendation for people who want to take care of your heart health is to drop the B vitamins and either: not smoking, exercising, controlling blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar regularly and eat a balanced diet and a rich in fruits and vegetables and low in fast food and other unhealthy products.