Categorized under Cardio & Blood

Imdur (Isosorbide Mononitrate)

Imdur (Isosorbide Mononitrate)


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Other names: Ismo, Monoket
Imdur (Isosorbide Mononitrate)
HEART ATTACK OPTIONS: THE SURGICAL ARMOURY-ANGIOGRAM (CARDIAC CATHETERIZATION)
A booklet from the British Heart Foundation (which has a hefty income of 24 million a year and therefore a big say in heart-related policies – largely governed by the cardiac surgeons on its advisory board) outlines the three main surgical and medical options used today:
angiogram (an invasive type of diagnostic technique)
angioplasty (various arterial widening techniques)
bypass surgery (in which blood vessels from other parts of the body are used to form grafts around coronary artery blockages)
There are also one or two non – or semi-invasive diagnostic techniques mentioned, such as electrocardiograms and electrocardiography where soundwaves are used either to indicate heart/artery activity or to detect it (well the latter is non-invasive if they don’t ask you to swallow the probe, as they sometimes do).
Let’s put them to the test, one by one.
Angiogram (Cardiac Catheterization)-In this diagnostic procedure, a thin catheter tube is snaked through an artery in the arm, neck or leg to reach the heart, pass out through the aorta and into the coronary arteries. Then a dye is injected to see what and where blockages may be.
Harold and Arline Brecher, in their authoritative book on every aspect of modern medical (and other) heart care, Forty Something Forever, describe this diagnostic facility as more ‘guessimate than science’, pointing out that in one landmark study, when 30 angiograms were circulated amongst top diagnosticians, agreement was found amongst them in only 60 per cent of instances. Worse: when the pictures were circulated a second time, the experts disagreed with their original opinions 50 per cent of the time.
They also point out that besides side effects from this painful three-hour marathon, such as nausea, coughing, vomiting, or allergic reactions to the dye (including kidney damage) there can also be serious complications if a piece of plaque gets dislodged from a blood vessel and gets carried to the heart or brain. (Which is why they ask you to sign permission for them to give emergency surgery such as bypass surgery before starting the treatment.)
In Chelation Can Cure, Dr E. McDonagh describes one patient who ended up in his surgery with slurred speech, weakness in one arm and loss of memory and mental function. He had been given an angiogram and didn’t wake up for three months – bits of plaque were loosened by the exploratory mechanism which lodged in his brain. (He was ultimately treated successfully with chelation surgery.) This is by no means unusual.
*26/104/2*

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