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BIOMARKERS

Molecular Biopsy of Human Tumors

- a resource for Precision Medicine *

128 related articles for article (PubMed ID: 20533621)

  • 1. Ask the doctor. After my heart attack doctor told me that damaged heart muscle cannot be replaced. If this is true, why am I walking on a treadmill five days a week? Is this helping repair the damage or strengthen what's left?
    Lee R
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  • 2. Ask the doctor. My wife has had all of the symptoms described in a recent study showing that women have different heart attack warning signs than men. I urged her to get a stress test but she says her doctor told her that the treadmill test isn't good at diagnosing heart trouble in women. Is this the case? Thanks to the treadmill test, I avoided a heart attack. Now I want the same thing for my wife!
    Harv Heart Lett; 2004 Mar; 14(7):8. PubMed ID: 15044146
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  • 3. Ask the doctor. I haven't had such good luck with my heart--a heart attack ten years ago and angioplasty with two stents inserted last year. Would it make sense for me to have a yearly stress test? If I had been doing that after my heart attack, maybe my doctor would have seen the blockage and we could have done something about it earlier.
    Lee TH
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  • 4. Ask the doctor. I had a heart attack 20 years ago. My doctor told me to stop taking vitamin E. My old cardiologist told me to take vitamin E every day to prevent another heart attack. What should I do?
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  • 5. Ask the Doctor: Because I had a lot of rhythm abnormalities after my heart attack a few years ago, my doctor gave me an implantable defibrillator. I've gotten so used to it that I forgot I even had it until a few weeks ago when I was sitting at dinner and felt a big thump in my chest that nearly knocked me out of my chair. I went to my cardiologist, who did some tests and told me not to worry about it. As I see it, I just died and was rescued by this thing. Shouldn't something more be done for me?
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  • 6. Ask the doctor. My doctor told me to cut out fats to lower my heart disease risk. What's the best way to do that?
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  • 7. Ask the doctor. Just two years ago, my total cholesterol was 175 mg/dL, and my LDL cholesterol was 128 mg/dL. This week my doctor told me that my cholesterol was 240 and my LDL was 170. I haven't gained any weight or changed my diet--what's going on?
    Lee TH
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  • 8. Ask the Doctor: Why didn’t a stress test warn me I was about to have a heart attack?
    Harv Heart Lett; 2003 May; 13(9):8. PubMed ID: 12763723
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  • 9. Ask the doctor. I had an echocardiogram of my heart, which was pretty simple and painless. Then, my cardiologist told me that I needed another echocardiogram, this time with a probe down my throat. What's the difference between these two procedures?
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  • 10. I am 58 years old and told my doctor I wanted to start an exercise program. I have never had any chest pain, but she told me I should have an exercise test because I have hypertension and diabetes. I felt fine during the test, but after four minutes they stopped me and told me my results were very abnormal. They said my EKG showed 3 mm of change. Two days later, I had a coronary angiogram, and two days after that I had bypass surgery! Was all this necessary?
    Lee TH
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  • 11. Ask the doctor. I am generally healthy, but I had a heart attack last year. At my age, 78 years old, I find it hard to take it seriously when my doctor and my children tell me that I should be lowering my cholesterol and exercising. It seems to me that the idea of trying to prevent "premature" death is silly in someone my age. It's not like I feel ready to die, but it's hard for me to believe that prevention works in someone who has already gone beyond his "three score ten" years.
    Lee TH
    Harv Heart Lett; 2000 Aug; 10(12):7. PubMed ID: 10927814
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  • 12. Ask the doctor. I had a nuclear exercise test last fall, and it was perfectly normal. Imagine my surprise this spring when I developed burning chest pain that turned out to be a heart attack on the bottom part of my heart. Did the doctors mess up the reading of my exercise test?
    Lee T
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  • 13. Ask the doctor. Every year my doctor used to put me on a treadmill for a stress test. Now he doesn't. Why?
    Bhatt DL
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  • 14. Ask the doctors. After I had a heart attack, my cardiologist put me on aspirin. I need a procedure next month, and my surgeon told me stop my aspirin a week beforehand. Is there any risk to stopping?
    Heart Advis; 2004 Jun; 7(6):8. PubMed ID: 15237468
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  • 15. Ask the doctors. I went to the emergency room with mild chest pains. Some blood work was done, and the doctor on duty said I had a heart attack. This prompted a cardiac catheterization which revealed that I had no blockages. The cardiologist told me that I hadn't had a heart attack. Why the confusion?
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  • 16. Ask the doctor. My daughter gave me a pedometer and told me to walk 10,000 steps a day. When I wore it for a while, I realized I was taking only about 3,000 steps a day. Is 10,000 a realistic number for someone my age (70 years)?
    Lee T
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  • 17. Ask the doctors. I'm in my 70s and my doctor says I'm slightly anemic. He says that puts me at risk of heart problems, maybe even heart failure. Why? What's the best way for me to treat my anemia? Eating more steak doesn't seem like a good idea.
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  • 18. Ask the doctor. My doctor told me I have bradycardia. I live at an altitude of 5,765 feet--would moving to a lower altitude help my heart rate? Recent cardiac tests, including a nuclear stress test, were normal. My cardiologist said I did not need a pacemaker, and to keep on doing what I've been doing. I used to jog five miles a day and now, at age 85, walk three miles a day.
    Zimetbaum P
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  • 19. Ask the doctor. I have had a leaking aortic valve for many years. I get an echocardiogram every six months. After the latest one, my doctor told me that my heart was enlarging and asked me repeatedly whether I was getting short of breath with exercise. I told him that sure, I get tired, but it isn't like I am breathing hard while sitting still. Now he wants me to have surgery to replace the valve. Should I do this at age 68?
    Lee T
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  • 20. Ask the doctors. I suffered a heart attack a few years ago, had an emergency angioplasty, and fortunately survived. I've been feeling great. But when I saw my cardiologist recently, he told me that I needed an implantable defibrillator because my heart muscle had been weakened by the heart attack. Do you think I need this?
    Heart Advis; 2004 Aug; 7(8):8. PubMed ID: 15551434
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