Go Back Natural Medicine Talk > Health > Heart Health

Reply
Thread Tools Display Modes
� #1
Old 10-14-2013, 09:36 PM
kind2creatures's Avatar
kind2creatures kind2creatures is online now
...elusive dreamer
Wiki Editor
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: USA
Posts: 5,581
Blog Entries: 44
kind2creatures is just really nicekind2creatures is just really nicekind2creatures is just really nicekind2creatures is just really nicekind2creatures is just really nice
Arrow Heart Disease Risk Increases at Age 40, and With Menopausal Women

Heart Disease Risk Increases at Age 40 and on Menopausal Women
=========================================

by: Junji Takano


Sudden feelings of chest pain or tightness are usually signs of heart disease. But not all heart problems are apparent. In fact, latest studies show that there is a mysterious heart disease that usually affects people aged 40, which is regarded as the peak age of onset. It's mysterious because this heart disease is very difficult to recognize and diagnose even if it is represented by severe chest pain.

In many cases, chest pain acts like a warning device to show that there is some problem with the body. However, there's another type of heart disease that is asymptomatic. Meaning to say, this condition does not produce or show symptoms, yet it can cause heart attack or cardiac arrest resulting to sudden death.

In this article, we'll tell you the latest information on these two types of hidden heart disease.


## Mysterious Angina - Can't Find the Cause?

Angina or angina pectoris is a heart condition characterized by sudden chest pain due to reduced supply of blood and oxygen to the heart caused by thickening and hardening of coronary arteries (arteriosclerosis).

However, there's a mysterious type of angina that also causes severe chest pain but is very hard to recognize. People at late 40s are usually affected with this condition. Since this heart problem is difficult to diagnose, an ordinary clinical examination won't be able to find the cause of the problem.

Imaging scans are commonly used to diagnose heart problems and determine the narrowed blood vessels in the arteries. With this mysterious angina, these narrowed blood vessels are undetectable through imaging scans.

Because of this, clinical examinations will only be able to diagnose it as "angina" at the later stage of the condition--typically, after the patient has been suffering with the symptoms for more than 15 years.

What exactly is this mysterious angina?


## Microvascular Angina - Common in Menopausal Women

When it comes to the heart's blood supply, the first thing that comes to mind is the large coronary artery.

But what are usually ignored are the very fine blood vessels branching from these coronary arteries. These fine vessels do not appear in cardiac imaging tests when in fact these are the ones that may actually be narrowing! Latest studies show that women are actually more prone to this condition than men because of the hormone estrogen.

It is known that the estrogen hormone helps increase blood flow by dilating blood vessels. Therefore, one of the considered major causes of this mysterious angina is the decline in female hormone estrogen.

This mysterious heart disease is medically known as "Microvascular Angina" or "Cardiac Syndrome X". About 1 out of 10 menopausal women develop this disease.
Rarely does microvascular angina progress to serious conditions, but it can significantly impair the quality of life as heavy chest pain worsens. The pain may last as short as five minutes or continue for as long as half a day. We recommend that you consult your doctor as you begin to experience worrisome symptoms including headaches, cold, and fatigue.

-- Available Treatments for Microvascular Angina Include:

1. Hormone replacement therapy if concurrent menopausal symptoms are experienced.

2. Calcium channel blockers to widen the blood vessels and lower blood pressure.


## Pinching Feeling in Chest but Without Pain? What is the Reason?

There's another type of heart disease that is asymptomatic, producing or exhibiting no symptoms at all. With this condition, you won't feel any pain in your chest despite having narrower coronary arteries. By the time symptoms arise, it's usually too late and you'll be diagnosed with severe angina.

Painless angina is medically known as silent or asymptomatic myocardial ischemia.

Why is it that you don't feel chest pain despite the heart's dangerous state? Here are the two most common reasons:

1. Diabetes - Damaged sensory nerves are one of the complications of diabetes. Sensory nerves are responsible in carrying signals like pain from the body to the brain. You won't feel chest or heart pain if these nerves are impaired.

2. Aging - There is a decline in most sensory systems as humans age, which of course include the density of nerves carrying pain signals. This is especially true for elderly people.

Although no pain will be felt by the patient suffering from asymptomatic (silent) myocardial ischemia, chest pinching can be one of the indications of the condition. Non-stop coughing or feeling of suffocation may also happen due to fluid accumulation in the lungs, which in effect caused by the heart problem.


## 3 Important Things to Remember:

1. Both microvascular angina and silent asymptomatic myocardial ischemia can increase a person's chance of getting stroke and sudden death if left untreated.

2. Hormone replacement therapy for women, and calcium channel blockers, can help relieve symptoms and slow the progression of microvascular angina or cardiac syndrome X.

3. Elderly people and people with diabetes are recommended to undergo regular heart screening process to prevent further complications.


----------------------------------------------------------
About the Author:
Junji Takano is a Japanese health researcher involved in electromedicine. In 1968, he invented PYRO-ENERGEN, the only electrostatic therapy machine that effectively eradicates viral diseases, cancer, and diseases of unknown cause.
Free newsletter: https://www.pyroenergen.com/newsletter.htm
Reply With Quote
� #2
Old 10-15-2013, 05:01 AM
liverock's Avatar
liverock liverock is offline
Lecturer
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Out of sight
Posts: 1,399
liverock is just really niceliverock is just really niceliverock is just really niceliverock is just really niceliverock is just really nice
Default

Magnesium,L-Carnitine and Vitamin D all help to keep arteries flexible.

https://www.wellnessresources.com/tag/stiff_arteries
Reply With Quote
� #3
Old 10-16-2013, 01:55 AM
Ted_Hutchinson's Avatar
Ted_Hutchinson Ted_Hutchinson is offline
Lecturer
Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 1,877
Blog Entries: 4
Ted_Hutchinson has a spectacular aura aboutTed_Hutchinson has a spectacular aura about
Default

It should be standard practice to suggest to women approaching and past menopause that they become regular blood donors.

I think it is disgraceful that the NHSBLOOD DONOR SERVICE stubbornly refuse to explain to blood donors the science suggesting regular blood donation may help donors as well as those patients receiving the blood.

After women stop regularly losing blood through monthly periods they start accumulating iron.
Ferritin levels start to climb and this doesn't just affect heart disease risk, it also may have damaging effects on the brain.
Midlife Iron Status Is Inversely Associated with Subsequent Cognitive Performance Particularly in Perimenopausal Women.

Cardiovascular benefits of phlebotomy:

Back to past leeches: repeated phlebotomies and cardiovascular risk

It makes me a bit grumpy when I read articles suggesting calcium channel blockers that don't point out the obvious fact that MAGNESIUM is a natural calcium channel blocker.
If we told people to supplement with vitamin D and MAGNESIUM rather than vitamin d and calcium we would see a bit difference in CVD incidence. The vitamin D enables a higher rate of calcium absorption from food and water (so less is required from supplements) but adding magnesium not only improves the uptake and availability of vitamin d it's also required to enable vit d to switch from calcidiol (circulating form) to calcitriol (active hormonal form)
Reply With Quote
� #4
Old 11-07-2013, 10:20 AM
happy2bhere's Avatar
happy2bhere happy2bhere is offline
Observing cool stuff
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: INternets
Posts: 728
happy2bhere will become famous soon enoughhappy2bhere will become famous soon enough
Default

I have recently noticed a spike in my BP. I am about two years post meno.

An August, 2013 reading: 110/67
Today: 136/80

Recently divorced. New house and all those issues. Can be some anxiety.

I have been taking garlic and tumeric along with my Iodoral, magnesium, selenium, D3 just recently.

I am going to go off all grains (especially wine) and see if it will come down a bit.

Never thought to donate blood, tho. Maybe time to have blood test and see where all that is at??
Reply With Quote
� #5
Old 11-11-2013, 04:24 PM
liverock's Avatar
liverock liverock is offline
Lecturer
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Out of sight
Posts: 1,399
liverock is just really niceliverock is just really niceliverock is just really niceliverock is just really niceliverock is just really nice
Default

Barbara Striesand on Menopausal women and heart disease.

Reply With Quote
Reply

Tags
aging, heart disease, menopause
Please reply to this thread with any new information or opinions.

Thread Tools
Display Modes


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Strawberries, blueberries may cut heart attack risk in women jfh Heart Health 1 01-15-2013 05:01 PM
Meta-analysis Reveals �Heart Healthy Omega-6 Fat� Increases Risk of Heart Disease Ted_Hutchinson Heart Health 3 12-05-2010 05:30 AM
Early-life cholesterol increases future heart disease risk: Study liverock Heart Health 1 08-11-2010 10:24 PM
Calcium supplements may increase the risk of a heart attack in older women Iggy Dalrymple Heart Health 7 03-28-2008 05:58 PM
Exercise May Combat Heart Disease in Post-Menopausal Women Harry Hirsute Heart Health 0 03-20-2008 10:26 AM