... people with typical pain were more likely than those with atypical pain to receive a diagnosis of angina pectoris and to have increased mortality rates or acute coronary complications, a study by UK ...
... Canada and internationally with documented coronary artery disease and a history of stable angina. The objective was to determine if treatment with ivabradine could improve exercise capacity in these ...
... do, it could be given as part of a combination therapy. "It's completely different from other anti-angina drugs which directly interact with the function of the heart. So the idea is to do a co- ...
... at the Feinberg School. "The study provides potential hope for those patients with currently untreatable angina to be more active with less pain."
"Baxter sponsored this trial in order to continue ...
... ).
The study results suggest that an extra-esophageal condition causes GERD symptoms and that angina may be misclassified as GERD. Since patients with GERD have an increased risk of angina pectoris ...
... Medical Centre is evaluating the safety and effectiveness of a potential new way to treat angina - by injecting a protein that stimulates the growth of new oxygen-rich blood vessels directly into the ...
(PhysOrg.com) -- Men with angina are twice as likely to have a heart attack and almost three times as likely to suffer a heart disease-related death than women with the same condition, finds a study ...
... or discomfort in the calves or legs that get better with rest. "This symptom – called claudication – is angina in the legs and puts you at risk of heart attack."
She says that heart attacks are often ...
... arteries supplying blood to the heart narrow, and includes disorders such as heart attacks and angina.
Steven Allender from the University of Oxford and colleagues from the University of Liverpool, ...
... pressure of 90 mm Hg or higher. High blood pressure increases the risk of heart attack, angina, stroke, kidney failure, peripheral artery disease (PAD) and the development of fatty deposits in ...
... are comfortable at rest but less than ordinary activity causes fatigue, palpitation, dyspnea or angina.
“What makes this study different from other studies of exercise in heart failure patients is ...
... and men with mild obstructions had similar outcomes six months after their heart attack or angina episode.
Part of the problem is that many patients and physicians don’t yet see coronary artery ...
... composite ischemia compared to heparin plus GPI in patients undergoing angioplasty for stable angina, unstable angina and non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI).
Dr. Stone emphasized the ...
... High-risk individuals are those who have already had a heart attack; cardiac chest pain (angina); previous angioplasty or bypass surgery; obstructed blood vessels to the arms, legs or brain; diabetes ...
... "By identifying these factors, a more complete understanding of those patients who are at the greatest risk for angina [chest pain] after myocardial infarction [heart attack] can occur," the authors ...