Showing posts with label heart attack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heart attack. Show all posts

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Lower your risk of Heart Attacks!

Here’s a tip I bet you’ve never heard of… you can lower your triglyceride levels with white bean extract! This simple vegetable blocks sugars from being absorbed and digested. One study showed that it lowered triglycerides by an average of 26 mg/dL.

Plus, white bean extract has an added benefit. Those who took it lost on average four pounds. Dr. Cutler suggests you take 1,500 mg of white bean extract twice a day.

He recommends other breakthrough treatments you can use to strengthen your heart, including:

How a certain tree resin from India prevents the build-up of plaque in your arteries.
The “sugar cane cure” that helps lower high cholesterol and high blood pressure.
The ginger spice that blocks cholesterol absorption in your intestines.
And, how a tasty “lemonade cleanse” can lower your blood pressure.
Dr. Cutler’s medical briefing A Doctor’s Treasury of Hushed Up Natural Heart Cures and Deadly Deceptions of Popular Heart Treatments blows the lid off mainstream medicine’s popular assembly line heart treatments. In his urgent report, you’ll find little known ways you can avoid a heart attack, unclog your arteries (before you experience a heart or brain related disaster), reverse heart disease, and even restore a failing heart without surgery, doctors, or drugs.

Plus, get the tools you need to see if your heart’s at risk, such as:

The heart attack predictor—this test accurately predicts whether or not you’ll have a heart attack in the next five years. It measures the presence of a seemingly harmless mineral that sticks to the walls of your arteries. Score above 400 and I suggest you see your doctor immediately!
The simple and safe blood test that helps you diagnose heart failure.
Plus, why allergies can increase your risk of having hardening of the arteries and what exactly what you can do about it.
In Dr. Cutler’s special medical briefing, he’ll explain in detail the six deadly heart deceptions you must know about if you want to keep your heart pumping for years to come. Don’t listen to conventional medicine… there are alternatives to dangerous surgery and harmful medications.

Monday, August 31, 2009

Women Have “Different” Heart Attacks

Dear Health Conscious Reader,

If you or someone you love was having a heart attack, would you be able to recognize the symptoms?

You may be surprised to learn there's more to a heart attack than chest pain. Especially in women. In fact, many women never realize they're having a heart attack – until it's too late.

Over the past several decades, modern medicine has improved its ability to rescue heart attack victims. But you must receive this life saving technology fast. The most common reason for death or serious heart damage is that patients simply don't recognize their symptoms in time.

The cells of your heart muscle require a constant supply of blood. If they don't get, they die. We had a saying in medical school, "Dead meat, don't beat." The number of cells that die during a heart attack determines if you live or die.

If you survive, the extent of this damage determines your future capacity or incapacity. Early detection and treatment makes the difference.

Here's a list of the common heart attack symptoms you've probably heard of:

Chest discomfort
Pain that radiates to the shoulders, neck, back or arms, especially the left arm
Dizziness
Sweating or breaking out in a cold sweat
Nausea
Shortness of breath
Pain that radiates to the jaw
Most people know to look out for those classic symptoms. What they don't know is that many heart attack victims don't experience any of the classic symptoms.

Many believed they strained a muscle. Some have no pain at all.

The signs considered typical of a heart attack—sharp chest pains, pains running down the left arm, and shortness of breath—are true in men. These are the "classic" symptoms we mentioned above.

But they're not common in women. A woman having a heart attack is more likely to experience:

Aches in the shoulders and both arms.
Abdominal discomfort that mimics indigestion.
Unusual fatigue.
Dizziness or lightheadedness.
A general feeling that something's wrong.
And often, no pain at all.
So what can you do? If you have one or more of the symptoms mentioned, get to an emergency room immediately! Don't put it off. Calling 911 is usually better than driving to the hospital. The EMS team can begin treatment immediately.

While you are waiting for EMS to arrive, chew and swallow a regular 325 mg aspirin. There's strong evidence that during a heart attack, a single aspirin could save your life.