COMING SOON:
GCVA's medical records will become "paperless." To facilitate speedy communications with oue referring physicians and ensure the safety of our patients GCVA will be moving to a cutting edge Electronic Medical Records (EMR) system powered by Nesticon.
COMING SOON:
Secure On-line registeration and speedy electronic communications with our patients about the result of tests, changes in treatment, etc.
How common
is a heart attack?: According to the AHA
(American Heart Association; based on statistics
from 1996) 1.1 million new and recurrent heart attacks
occur per year in the United States. There are about
800,000 new heart attack survivors per year, according
to the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS).
Following are additional important statistics provided
by the AHA and NCHS:
There are 12 million victims of
angina, heart attack and other forms of coronary
artery disease (CAD) living in the USA.
5.8 million are male and 6.1 million
are female.
Approximately 225,000 people die,
including 125,000 who die suddenly or before they
reach a hospital. Most of these deaths are due
to lethal irregular heart beats.
Heart Disease is the number one
cause of death in the USA. This is followed by
cancer, stroke, lung disease and accidents.
from 1986 to 1996 the death rate from CAD declined
approximately 25%
What
are the symptoms of a heart attack? A heart
attack may be the first symptom of coronary artery
disease in many patients. In others, it may be preceded
by days, weeks, months or even years of angina.
Classic or commonest signals of a heart
attack consists of pressure- like, squeezing, or
tightness feeling in the center of the chest that
may radiate or move to the left shoulder and arm.
In some, it may move to both shoulders and arms,
the jaw, or between the shoulder blades in the back.
If this is merely an angina warning, the symptom
may go away in a few minutes and then return.
Once a coronary artery is totally
blocked, a heart attack takes place and the chest
discomfort becomes more intense and persistent.
The chest discomfort or pain may be accompanied
by shortness of breath, unexplained anxiety (a sense
of impending doom), weakness, marked fatigue, cold
sweats, paleness and a feeling of skipped heart
beats. It must be recognized that only one or some
of these symptoms may accompany the chest discomfort
of heart attack. Also, the symptoms may not be typical
in some cases and shortness of breath, cold sweats
or marked and sudden fatigue may be the only symptom.
Heart Attack 2/6
Heartsite.com is the award wining site that has provided GCVA with the interactive, engaging, and unbiased educational contents to educate their patients
CardiolgySite.com was conceived to serve as a remote learning experience for health care providers, students, residents, fellows and people interested in expanding their knowledge in specific areas of cardiology. It was designed to provide the equivalent of classroom lectures and demonstrations with the use of the latest web-based multimedia technology.