"Head and heart: how research must go hand in hand" It’s tempting to see problems with the heart and head as completely separate. We even talk about them as separate entities when making decisions — do you go with your head or your heart? But the truth is, what goes on in your heart really matters for your head. People who have coronary heart disease, or who have had a heart attack, are twice as likely to have a stroke as those who haven’t — and people with atrial fibrillation (one of the most common forms of abnormal heart rhythm) are five times more likely to have a stroke. #Cardiology #Heart #Head #HeartCongress #heartdiseases #interventionalcardiology #CardiacSurgery #cardiologyconferences #oncology #Cardiologymeetings #HeartConferences #cardiooncology #cardiovasculardiseases #medicalconferences #medevents #Cardiology2019 #January2019 #Dubai #UAE
Acute heart failure is an illness that hits suddenly and without any earlier symptoms. Indeed, the medical definition of acute, according to MediLexicon, is "a health effect, usually of rapid onset, brief, not prolonged; sometimes loosely used to mean severe." This article looks at the causes, symptoms, and other facts about acute heart failure to help people understand this condition better. Types of heart failure Acute heart failure is heart failure that occurs suddenly and sometimes without warning. Heart failure is the inability of the heart to pump enough blood to serve the body's needs. It can be acute or chronic. Chronic heart failure develops slowly, while acute occurs suddenly. The heart is a complex organ. Any failure can take place on either the left or right side or both. The heart has four chambers, which work in a rhythm to pump blood around the body. If these chambers stiffen, they may not fill sufficiently. If the heart, whi...
Abstract Importance The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) operates a nationwide system of hospitals and hospital-affiliated clinics, providing health care to more than 2 million veterans with cardiovascular disease. While data permitting hospital comparisons of the outcomes of acute cardiovascular care (eg, myocardial infarction) are publicly available, little is known about variation across VA medical centers (VAMCs) in outcomes of care for populations of patients with chronic, high-risk cardiovascular conditions. Objective To determine whether there are substantial differences in cardiovascular outcomes across VAMCs. Design, Setting, and Participants Retrospective cohort study comprising 138 VA hospitals and each hospital’s affiliated outpatient clinics. Patients were identified who received VA inpatient or outpatient care between 2010 and 2014. Separate cohorts were constructed for patients diagnosed as having either ischemic heart...
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