CardioSmart | Living With Chronic Angina

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 13. 09. 2024
  • To learn more about CardioSmart's Living with Chronic Angina educational sessions for patients, watch this video from a previous event.

Komentáře • 33

  • @Happy-Trails-To-You
    @Happy-Trails-To-You Před 2 lety +2

    Very helpful explanation. I have had a pain in my left upper chest that radiates down my left arm when I begin exercising, It has been getting worse. It started about 15 years ago, and I see a Cardiologist at least annually. I have had nuclear stress test several times. Never told me it might be angina. They told me it was muscular, or skeletal related. I am physically active, not overweight and don't smoke. My mother had heart disease. I am 71 now. Just purchased a treadmill and after only about 3 minutes, the pain is very bad. Sometimes I can work thru it but today I just had to stop. If I don't the pain will linger for hours or longer. Stopping exercising gives me fast relief. I am seeing a Cardiologist in two weeks. I am going to push this issue on angina.

    • @DeionHarris
      @DeionHarris Před rokem

      i pray its nothing bad

    • @Happy-Trails-To-You
      @Happy-Trails-To-You Před rokem

      @@DeionHarris Thank you for your thoughts. I had an Angioplasty (or angiogram). Turns out my heart is healthy and fine. The pain in my chest is a pinched nerve in my left shoulder blade that radiates to the left front of my chest. Hurts like heck, sometimes, but it wont kill me. I have learned how to alleviate it. Once again. Thank you.

    • @DeionHarris
      @DeionHarris Před rokem

      thank god u blessed stay blessed

  • @angelar.2088
    @angelar.2088 Před 4 lety +12

    I just need a cardiologist that cares enough to help me get rid of the tears I cry because of the pain . 3 clogged arteries leading to my heart . I'm in so much pain and can't take it . Miracle 🌼 Unstable for months .

    • @bbcapryllian9337
      @bbcapryllian9337 Před 4 lety +3

      Yoiu gotta help yourself...seasrch CZcams and your answers will come...start with EDTA and Magnesium....and...sodium is not the problem.

    • @ronrichardson3103
      @ronrichardson3103 Před 3 lety +1

      Go to the local A and E hospital after a long wait in the waiting room they will admit you and put you in the correct place to get you sorted . Ask for the cardiac dept.

    • @cynthiaeckre9667
      @cynthiaeckre9667 Před 3 lety

      Hi

    • @nmamatthias1933
      @nmamatthias1933 Před 3 lety

      How are you feeling now

    • @DeionHarris
      @DeionHarris Před rokem

      @@bbcapryllian9337 i thought sodium was the problem

  • @MrDublinerzzz
    @MrDublinerzzz Před 2 lety +1

    Wonderful informing talk

  • @rafaelmonroy7406
    @rafaelmonroy7406 Před rokem

    Very, very, very helpful information thank you very much....

  • @paulawilliams2151
    @paulawilliams2151 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you so much for all your information 😇

  • @johnkimball5872
    @johnkimball5872 Před 4 lety +8

    2 months angina for me. It really effects my quality of life.

    • @SolidSiren
      @SolidSiren Před rokem

      18 years for me. Mine feels like a stabbing, very sharp pain. At times, it is so sharp qnd strong it nearly takes my breath away. It seems random. It doesn't happen when I'm active. Most days it doesn't happen at all. Then suddenly a particular day, it will happen on and off all day. It was so scary for so many years. I thought I was having a heart attack a few times when it didn't stop after a minute and continued for hours. It never was a heart attack according to eegs., but I do have an enlarged ascending aorta. Right at my aortic root right off the heart. That's why I'm so scared sometimes.

  • @rhondiebadcock1243
    @rhondiebadcock1243 Před 2 lety +1

    Rhondie Badcock
    Thank you explanation confirm to me that my angina is stress/Anger/Cold weather.

  • @kreepingitreal
    @kreepingitreal Před 2 lety +2

    Her voice is so soothing for this topic 🥺 I think I have this🥺 I have had chest pain that comes and goes and is triggered by stress and also comes randomly.

  • @jeffreyfine558
    @jeffreyfine558 Před 7 měsíci

    Thank you. I wouldn't be surprised if my ticker is fine. The range of possible causes is annoying. I am sure the cardiologist will find the answer.

  • @juliepeat4402
    @juliepeat4402 Před 5 měsíci

    Is the American way of saying the word Angina different, because as an English person we don’t say it like that.

  • @BH-wj9lx
    @BH-wj9lx Před rokem +1

    Mines hurts all day

    • @DeionHarris
      @DeionHarris Před rokem

      thats not good

    • @mukisaroland8127
      @mukisaroland8127 Před rokem

      I face the same, please let me know what was the problem. The pain is not sharp

  • @SolidSiren
    @SolidSiren Před rokem +2

    ... "an-ja-na"?? It's pronounced "an-jai-nah". I have never in my entire life heard a cardiologist or any doctor pronounce it this way.

    • @luanneneill2877
      @luanneneill2877 Před 8 měsíci

      The medical pronunciation is AN-ji-na. The general population pronounces it an-JI-na. The doctors who pronounce it like the general population, do so so the people know what they’re talking about. At medical meetings, trust me, they all pronounce it the first way.
      It’s just like tinnitus. The general population pronounces it tin-I-tus, but the medical pronunciation is actually TIN-i-tus.

  • @kencooke5901
    @kencooke5901 Před 2 lety +3

    I wish she would pronounce Angina correctly. It’s so irritating.

    • @SolidSiren
      @SolidSiren Před rokem

      It ruined the video for me. Apparently this IS a secondary "American pronunciation", but I'm American, seen cardios around the country and have never once ever heard a doctor say it like this. I hate it!

    • @benjaminashery7728
      @benjaminashery7728 Před rokem +1

      @@SolidSiren my cardio pronounces it the same way she says it

    • @SolidSiren
      @SolidSiren Před rokem

      @benjaminashery7728 is your cardiologist British? The American pronunciation is "anj-eye-nah"

    • @DavidGonzalez-su6zg
      @DavidGonzalez-su6zg Před 9 měsíci

      its actually Aah-JIH-NA. @@SolidSiren not AN JEYE-NA like VAGINA.

  • @BryanDoesCinema
    @BryanDoesCinema Před rokem

    an-jeh-nuh is the correct pronouncement actually, she is saying it right. Only TV Drs say an-JI-nuh.
    Tinnitus has this same problem. They are both ok to say.

    • @SolidSiren
      @SolidSiren Před rokem

      The "correct" pronunciation for anyone speaking American English is "anj-eye-nuh".

    • @luanneneill2877
      @luanneneill2877 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@SolidSirenNot if you’re a doctor talking to other doctors. The correct medical pronunciation is AN-ji-nuh. The common population pronunciation is your way.