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Heart
Disease
Books
Heart
disease emerged as one of the leading causes of death
in Western countries by the end of the 20th century.
Great advances occurred in diagnosis, treatment, and
prevention of this widespread disease.
Diagnosis
improved with the widespread use of cardiac catheterization
in the 1950s. This procedure involves threading a slender
tube into the heart to take measurements and identify
blocked arteries. Less invasive diagnostic methods,
such as thallium scans in which a special imaging camera
detects the movement of thallium in heart muscle, provided
additional diagnostic improvements.
These
techniques led to a new era in surgical treatment of
coronary heart disease, artery blockages that cause
most heart attacks. Physicians began treating blocked
coronary arteries with a variety of new techniques.
The first bypass operation was performed in 1967 and
involved the creation of a new route for blood supply
to reach blood-starved heart muscles. In balloon angioplasty,
developed in 1977, a deflated balloon is inserted into
a narrowed artery. The balloon is then inflated at the
site of the narrowing to widen it. Other surgical advances
included replacement of diseased heart valves with artificial
valves; implantation of pacemakers that maintain normal
heart rhythm; use of temporary artificial hearts; and
better methods for correcting hereditary defects in
the heart.
New
drugs were developed to treat angina pectoris, the chest
pain of heart disease; high blood pressure; dangerous
abnormalities in heart rhythm; and high blood cholesterol
levels. Studies showed that drug treatment could reduce
the risk of a heart attack or stroke. In the 1980s,
aspirin went into wide use to prevent blood clots that
cause many heart attacks. Emergency medical personnel
also began using drugs that dissolve clots and stop
a heart attack if given soon after symptoms develop.
Advances
have been made in the prevention of heart disease. Studies
have identified risk factors such as high blood pressure,
high blood cholesterol, cigarette smoking, diabetes,
obesity, and lack of exercise. Government health agencies
and public health groups began public education programs
to help people reduce heart disease risks. These preventive
methods seem to be working-according to the American
Heart Association, the death rate from coronary heart
disease declined 26.3 percent between 1988 and 1998.
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