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How To Get Rid Of Cardiovascular Diseases
November 25th, 2008 by admin
When you speak about cardiovascular disease, you are discussing not one specific disease but a whole range of diseases that affect your heart or the blood vessels. These diseases include heart attack, coronary artery disease, high blood pressure, heart failure, and stroke (which does not include the heart but still involves the arteries). In practice, cardiovascular diseases are treated by cardiologists, vascular surgeons, and neurologists, depending primarily on what organ is affected. Since cardiovascular diseases tend to have similar causes and mechanisms, there is a tendency to overlap in specialties and it is not uncommon for a procedure to be performed by several specialists in one hospital.
Cardiovascular diseases are a great risk, especially to people living in Western countries. In the United States alone, cardiovascular problems are the number one cause of death according to a survey done in 2007. Heart diseases alone caused 30% of the deaths, while the other cardiovascular diseases caused substantial death and disability.
Causes of Cardiovascular Diseases
While there are many diseases that fall under the umbrella of the term cardiovascular disease, the term is mostly used to describe the damage caused to your heart or blood vessels by atherosclerosis. Atherosclerosis is the chronic inflammation of the walls of your arteries, mostly due to the accumulation of fats and cholesterol. It leads to a narrowing of the arteries, resulting in less blood to the organs. Since arteries are responsible for carrying nutrients and oxygenated blood to the the organs, a hardening and blockage of them will lead to complications and health issues. Accumulated plaques may also break off, totally blocking blood flow to the organs, which is more severe. If atherosclerosis affects the arteries leading to the heart, you may develop a heart attack. If the blockage occurs in the arteries to the brain, you will have a stroke.
The usual suspects for atherosclerosis and other cardiovascular diseases remain the same: unhealthy diet, unhealthy lifestyle, being overweight, and smoking. All the risks and causes of various cardiovascular and heart conditions are almost always the same, since the system tends to have the same mechanism. Conversely, their treatment and prevention are also similar.
Types of Cardiovascular Diseases
The cardiovascular system is made up of your heart and the blood vessels all around your body. Diseases such as aneurysm or stroke are still considered cardiovascular in nature even if they're nowhere near the heart since they involve the arteries. Cardiovascular diseases can be congenital (meaning you're born with them) or you may acquire them later in life. There are many types of cardiovascular diseases. The most common are:
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Okay, we have the list of what the insurance companies have decreed will cure the problem.
What is the REAL cure for these problems?