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BiBi DeAngelo
Knowflake

Posts: 972
From: Los Angeles, CA, USA
Registered: Jun 2007

posted March 05, 2009 08:51 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for BiBi DeAngelo     Edit/Delete Message
Indicators to Look for – Heart Disease:

If you have this on your ear...
A transverse crease -- one that goes horizontally across your ear -- may indicate heart disease, says Dr. Snyderman. "About eight years ago, there was a study of 108 people that found that individuals with a crease in at least one earlobe were more likely to die than people with out ear creases." This indented mark gives a clue about your body's levels of elastin -- a protein that affects blood vessel functioning. If you don't have enough elastin, it could be a sign of heart disease.

Baldness is a risk factor
Men who are balding at the front of the head and the crown should get their hearts evaluated, says Dr. Snyderman. "It has to do with vascular supply to the hair follicles -- everything in your body needs a blood vessel. The earlier the baldness and the more bald the baldness, the higher the risk of heart disease." Compared with men who are not bald, the risk of heart disease increases by 9 percent if the balding is at the front of a man's head, by 23 percent if it is at the crown and by 36 percent if he is completely bald on the top of his head, according to a Harvard Health study cited by Dr. Snyderman.

Snoring can indicate heart disease
"If you snore and you have sleep apnea -- when you stop breathing at night for 10 seconds or longer -- the risk of heart disease is real," says Dr. Snyderman. "We brush off snoring as no big deal, but your heart and your lungs have to work that much longer just to circulate your blood, and this takes a toll. This affects men and women equally."

How erectile dysfunction relates to heart disease
"If a man comes to the doctor's office complaining that he can't get an erection, he really has to get his heart evaluated," says Dr. Snyderman. If you're having a hard time getting blood to the penis to achieve an orgasm, "you have to wonder if the vascular supply coming out of the heart or to the heart isn't good." Men who have erectile dysfunction are 80 percent more likely to develop heart disease than men who do not, and young men in their 40s who have erectile dysfunction are twice as likely to get heart disease, according to a Mayo Clinic study cited by Dr. Snyderman.

Risky combinations
Having multiple risk factors can up your odds for heart disease astronomically. The combination of high blood pressure and baldness ups a man's risk by 79 percent, whereas having high cholesterol and male-patterned baldness increases his risk by 178 percent, according to a Harvard Health study cited by Dr. Snyderman.

Jaw pain may signal a heart attack
You know the basic heart attack symptoms: pain shooting down your left arm, or a large pain under the breast bone, which Dr. Snyderman says patients describe as "having an elephant sitting on your chest." But one unusual sore spot related to heart attacks is often a complaint among women -- pain in the jaw, when heart attack pain radiates up to the jaws and teeth.

Men and women feel heart attack pain differently
"Women more than men have this intuitive sense that something is not quite right," says Dr. Snyderman. "Usually for men, the way they discover heart attack risk is when they feel, 'Oh, my God, something is happening.'"

Heart disease kills this gender more
Men. "Estrogen probably protects women a little bit, until later in life when estrogen levels drop," says Dr. Snyderman. "But women also access the healthcare system more than men. Men go to the pediatrician and stay in the healthcare system till they're 18, then they disappear. Unfortunately, with heart disease being the number-one killer, it's often heart disease that brings men to the doctor's office."

Men's risky behavior ups their risk
Men are greater risk-takers than women -- and this could have an impact on whether they are affected by heart disease, says Dr. Snyderman. "The typical overworked guy is a smoker, who works and is under stress. On top of that, he has a bad diet and never exercises. These become cumulative factors. Obviously genetics play a role, too."

Sleep matters
"We are a sleep-deprived nation," says Snyderman. "When you cut back on shuteye, your immune system really takes a hit. Stress and lack of sleep are really compound factors that can increase heart-disease risk."

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dsmitchell
Knowflake

Posts: 3
From: Princeton KY USA
Registered: May 2003

posted March 19, 2009 03:45 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for dsmitchell     Edit/Delete Message
Interesting info. I had a heart attack in 2007 at the "young" age of 42. I didn't realize it was a heart attack at the time because my symptoms were not textbook. I walked around a week before the big one hit. My symptoms seemed more acid reflux, indigestion related or so I thought. But, I was lucky and had a stent installed and have been okay since. However, I strongly urge anyone that even remotely thinks they are having a heart attack, please seek medical attention immediately. Seconds count. Also, I"ve read that if you cough a few times, it might help while you're having a heart episode. Also keep baby aspirin handy.

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BiBi DeAngelo
Knowflake

Posts: 972
From: Los Angeles, CA, USA
Registered: Jun 2007

posted March 27, 2009 02:57 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for BiBi DeAngelo     Edit/Delete Message
dsmitchell...

glad to hear your ok...

I had a friend that started to go into a heart attack and she had been told about "deep" coughing her physician said it actually massages the heart... it worked... finally her rhythm came back together and the bubbling sensation she was having in her throat stopped... we went directly to the hospital and she was told she was lucky to have made it.

My best friend is on baby aspirin ... coated... 81... seems it should be coated not to upset the stomach and the 81 (believe it was 81) is a certain dosage... it sure works for her and her friends.

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