Your stress of Covid could cause this deadly heart disease, finds the study
People without heart disease history can not meet at the hospital with that.
There seems to be an end to the symptoms and the very varied conditions that Covid-19 can cause. In the months when the pandemic began, doctors and researchers discovered a litany in manner in which the disease can affect the human body. The most seeks to involve major organs, such as lungs, brain and heart. A study published on the Jama Open network on July 9 reveals another specific place through whichCoronavirus can attack your heart: The researchers see an increase in patients pounding broken heart syndrome and believe it is indirect from coronavirus.
Despite its name, broken heart syndrome has not been invented for the purposes of a love novel. The condition is very real, even if it is usually not deadly. According to the Clinic of Cleveland, where the study was made, the termBroken heart syndrome Refers to "a group of symptoms similar to those of a heart attack, occurring in response to physical or emotional stress". Patients who suffer often believe they have a heart attack, but the main difference is that their arteries are not blocked. Therefore, although part of their heart becomes enlarged and unable to effectively pump blood, the most broken heart syndrome, patients recover quickly with treatment. According to the American Heart Association,Fatal cases are very rare.
The Clinic of Cleveland states that women - especially post-menopausal Asian and Caucasian women - are more likely to undergo broken heart syndrome than men. Many people who suffer are otherwise healthy and can not have any history of heart disease. It is also called stress cardiomyopathy or Takotsubo syndrome. And it is usually induced by stressors, which may include, by the clinic of Cleveland, "the death of a loved one, a divorce, the rupture of a romantic relationship, an asthma attack, a physical event exhausting, even happy events ... "
For this study, researchers compared five cohorts of patients through two hospitals of the Cleveland Clinic - four hospitalized over a period preceding the pandemic and one after. In these periods of eight previous weeks, there were between five and 12 cases of broken cardiac syndrome registered. But the fifth period, in the middle of Coronavirus, saw 20 patients treated condition.
"The raise ofSocioeconomic and psychological stress From the pandemic literally increased stress cardiomyopathy "Ankur Kalra, MD, interventional cardiologist at the Clinic of Cleveland and co-author of the study told NBC News. Noting that broken heart syndrome is not a symptom of Covid-19 itself, he pointed out that this seems to be "a new danger to health that the pandemic has caused because of other stressors than the pandemic caused ".
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Pandemic coronavirus has put additional tensions on the Americans, who could worry about their finances, their own health and health of their loved ones. Many are also facing these problems in isolated or relative insulation and do not have access to certain activities that can relieve stress. Due to the dangers, the stress can pose to the heart, the researchers of the study are emphasized that people who are victims of symptoms are treated immediately instead of avoiding the hospital because of coronavirus.
"When you think you have to look for care, you should seek care," KALRA said.
And for more information on your cardiovascular health, here is here30 ways to reduce your risk of heart attack that you did not know.