Cardiovascular diseases are one of the most serious threats to human health, including coronary heart disease and moderate brain size. These diseases tend to occur suddenly, but their early onset sends some warning signals to our bodies. Understanding these signals helps us to identify problems in a timely manner and to take measures to reduce the risk of disease.
I. Early warning signals for cardiovascular diseases
1. Chest pain or hysteria: this is one of the most common symptoms of cardiovascular disease. Patients may feel pressurized, irritated or constricted, and pain may be emitted to the left arm, neck, chin or back. Such pain usually occurs during physical activity or emotional agitation and can be mitigated by resting or taking nitrate glycerine. The possibility of coronary heart disease should be kept in high alert if chest pain is frequent, aggravated or prolonged.
Heartbreak: Self-conscious heart rate too fast, too slow or irregular, often accompanied by a feeling of panic. Heart palpitation after exercise, drinking, coffee or tea is generally biological, but if heart palpitation occurs frequently in a quiet state, it may be a sign of heart disorder, such as early strokes, room tremors, etc., which requires further examination.
3. Respiratory difficulties: In the absence of visible physical activity or other inducements, there is a suddenness of breathing, shortness of air, especially when it increases during a flat sleep, and post-sitting relief, which may be a sign of impaired heart function and a reminder of the risk of heart failure.
4. Wearyness: Unidentified and persistent fatigue and inefficiency, which are difficult to recover even after full rest, may be linked to a reduction in the blood function of the heart pump, leading to a lack of blood supply from organs of the body.
Euphomic oedema: When the heart function is incomplete and the blood flow is blocked, it can result in an oedema in the lower parts of the body, as follows, which can be dented by pressure. Eedema usually increases in the evening and decreases in the morning.
II. Early warning signals for cerebrovascular diseases
1. Dizziness: sudden severe headaches, or the nature and degree of headaches have changed over time, accompanied by dizziness, dizziness and possibly a precursor to cerebrovascular diseases, such as brain haemorrhage, brain infarction, etc. In particular, high blood pressure patients should be measured and treated in a timely manner if they experience headaches.
2. Lack of clarity of speech or weakness of limbs: In cases of short-lived ischaemic haemorrhage (TIA), the patient may suddenly experience symptoms such as ambiguity, difficulty in speaking, or in one side of the body, incompetence, instability of the hold, and slanting, but these symptoms are usually self-resorted within minutes to hours. This is a very dangerous signal that brain vessels may have severe narrowness or specks and that there is a high risk of brain infarction in the near future.
3. Visual impairments: sudden loss of vision, loss of vision or ulterior blackness, which may be the result of an eye deficiency caused by retina artery or a brain vascular disease. Such visual problems, which are often brief, may recur and cannot be ignored.
4. Balancing disorders or pacifities: When a cerebrovascular disease affects a small brain or brain stem, the patient may suffer from a balance disorder, a unstable walk, and can easily tilt or fall on one side, as if intoxicated.
5. Memory loss or loss of cognitive function: Repeated symptoms of memory loss, low focus, slow thinking may be associated with brain blood deficiency and brain atrophy caused by cerebrovascular diseases.
If these early warning signals of cardiovascular disease appear, do not be lightly disposed of. Relevant examinations, such as electrocardiograms, cardiac ultrasound, blood pressure, blood resin, blood sugar, skull CT, MRI, etc., should be carried out in time for early diagnosis and treatment. At the same time, in our daily lives, we must maintain a healthy lifestyle, a reasonable diet, a proper amount of exercise, abdication of alcohol, weight control, psychological balance and active prevention of cardiovascular diseases.
Cerebrovascular disease