Cardiology is the medical specialty focused on the heart and the cardiovascular system. It involves the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of conditions affecting the heart and blood vessels. These conditions include coronary artery disease, heart failure, arrhythmias (irregular heartbeats), and valve disorders. The field covers a broad spectrum, from congenital heart defects present at birth to acquired conditions like heart attacks.
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Treating peripheral vascular disease is about two things: saving the limb and saving the life. The immediate goal is to improve symptoms, allowing you to walk without pain and healing any wounds. The long-term goal is to reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke, which are the real dangers behind the diagnosis.
Treatment is usually a ladder. We start with the simplest, least invasive steps—lifestyle changes and medication. If that isn’t enough, we move to minimally invasive procedures like balloons and stents. Open surgery is reserved for the most severe cases where other options have failed or aren’t possible. Rehabilitation is a partner to all these treatments, focusing on structured exercise to rebuild the body’s natural capabilities.
Before pills or surgery, lifestyle change is the foundation. For early-stage disease, this can be enough to stop symptoms completely.
Smoking cessation is non-negotiable. Stopping smoking halts the damage to the artery walls. Walking programs are also prescribed as “medicine.” By walking into the pain, resting, and walking again, you train your muscles to use oxygen better and encourage the growth of collateral vessels. We also immediately initiate dietary changes to lower cholesterol and blood pressure.
Medications don’t unclog arteries, but they prevent the disease from getting worse and protect against heart attacks.
If lifestyle and medication aren’t enough, or if the blockage is severe, minimally invasive procedures are used. These are done in a cath lab through a small puncture in the groin.
Angioplasty involves threading a catheter with a small balloon into the blockage. The balloon is inflated to squash the plaque against the artery wall and stretch the vessel open. Stenting often follows. A stent is a small metal mesh tube that acts as a scaffold. It is left inside the artery permanently hold it open. Some balloons and stents are coated with drugs to prevent scar tissue from growing back over them.
Sometimes plaque is too hard or calcified to be squashed by a balloon. In these cases, atherectomy is used. This literally means “cutting out the plaque.”
Special catheters with tiny rotating blades, lasers, or sanding heads are used to shave or vaporize the plaque from the inside of the artery. The debris is trapped and removed. This “roto-rooter” approach clears the channel and makes follow-up ballooning more effective.
Open surgery is the best option for very long blockages or those that a wire cannot cross. A peripheral bypass is like a detour on a highway. The surgeon takes a healthy vein from your leg (or a synthetic tube) and sews it onto the artery above and below the blockage.
Blood flows through this new graft, skipping the clogged section entirely. This is a major surgery requiring a hospital stay and recovery time, but it is very durable and effective, especially for saving a limb at risk of amputation.
Sometimes PVD presents as a sudden emergency due to a fresh blood clot (thrombus) blocking an artery. This is called acute limb ischemia. In these cases, thrombolysis might be used.
A catheter is placed directly into the clot, and “clot-busting” medication (tPA) is dripped in slowly over several hours or days. This dissolves the clot chemically. It is usually done in the ICU under close monitoring due to bleeding risks. Mechanical suction devices can also be used to suck the clot out.
Rehabilitation for PVD is unique because it involves pushing through pain. Supervised Exercise Therapy (SET) is a formal program covered by Medicare and many insurers. Patients go to a clinic 3 times a week for 12 weeks.
They walk on a treadmill until their leg pain reaches a moderate level (3 or 4 out of 5). They stop and rest until the pain goes away completely, then get back on. This cycle is repeated 30–60 minutes. This rigorous training forces the body to adapt and can double or triple the distance a person can walk comfortably.
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The primary difference lies in the cancer’s origin and central location. Leukemia originates in the bone marrow and primarily affects the blood and bone marrow, circulating as liquid cancer. Lymphoma also originates from blood cells, but typically forms solid tumors in lymph nodes and other lymphoid tissues.
Lymphoma is generally not considered an inherited condition passed directly from parent to child. While having a close family member with lymphoma may slightly increase risk, the vast majority of cases arise from acquired genetic mutations that occur during a person’s lifetime due to environmental factors, infections, or random errors in cell division.
The main types are Metabolic Acidosis (too much acid, often kidney-related), Metabolic Alkalosis (too much base), Respiratory Acidosis (too much carbon dioxide from slow breathing), and Respiratory Alkalosis (too little carbon dioxide from fast breathing).
You should see a nephrologist if blood tests show a persistent acid-base problem, especially if you have an existing kidney condition like Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) or if the disorder is metabolic. They specialise in the complex role the kidneys play in regulating pH.
Nephrology focuses on the kidney’s role in the long-term regulation of base (bicarbonate) and acid excretion. Pulmonology focuses on the lung’s role in the rapid regulation of carbon dioxide levels. Both are vital, but handle different parts of the Acid-Base control system.
Cardiology
Cardiology
Cardiology
Cardiology
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