The signs and symptoms of Coronary Artery Disease
July 29th, 2009 | by Clare |
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For numerous there are no signs and symptoms of Coronary Artery Disease until one day you have a heart attack. If you think you are at risk the best thing to do is see your doctor. The high jeopardy factors for Coronary Artery Disease are:
1) Overweight: those who carry their weight in their mid-section are at an even higher risk of heart disease.
2) Lack of Exercise overweight
3) Smoking tobacco products
4) High levels of continuous stress
5) Diabetes
6) Hypertension
7) High lipid profile or high cholesterol levels
Age 65 or older
9) Male gender
10) Family history of heart disease
11) Menopause
Your doctor will ask you questions about any chest discomfort that you may be undergoing. Authority will want to know what you are doing when the chest pain starts and warrant it feels coextensive. They will want words especially describe the pain such as crushing, sharp, stabbing, dull, etc. They will beyond want to know locality the pain is and if it radiates (travels) to other areas. Common areas of pain are the chest, the jaw, pain moving down the left arm or almost to the back. Next tell your doctor how the pain is relieved. Do you take medications, does it go away with Sunday or do you note the chest pain constantly.
Your doctor will to boot ask you about your past medical history and your close order history. This means mom, dad, your brothers and sisters, your grandparents and your parents’ brothers and sisters if you don’t have information on your grandparents. They especially want to know about close family members who were diagnosed take it* coronary artery disease before the age of 50.
The doctor will necessitate your blood pressure, listen to your heart and lungs, check your extremities (arms and legs) for impaired circulation and take some basic blood tests specifically include cholesterol, triglyceride and lipid levels. The doctor should then get a 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG). Your doctor will then determine how many risk factors you are positive for and proceed from there. If they believe you are a high risk or you have pain that is unrelieved ruling class may do some more testing such as stress tests and echocardiograms. If these are positive they will move on to more invasive testing such as a coronary angiogram to determine the extent of the blockage to the arteries.