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BIOMARKERS

Molecular Biopsy of Human Tumors

- a resource for Precision Medicine *

123 related articles for article (PubMed ID: 25291815)

  • 1. Ask the doctor. After several episodes where my heart suddenly started racing, I was diagnosed with supraventricular tachycardia. My doctor said I could try gagging or coughing to help slow down my heart when these episodes occur. Why would these things help?
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  • 3. Ask the doctor. I'm a fit 61-year-old who had bypass surgery 15 years ago. Recently, I've been having rapid heart-beats (what my doctor calls supraventricular tachycardia) during or just after vigorous exercise. Should I tone down my exercise?
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  • 4. Ask the doctor. Someone forwarded an e-mail to me about coughing during a heart attack. It said that if I am having a heart attack, coughing deeply and strongly every few seconds could save my life. Is that true?
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  • 5. Ask the doctor. I have had heart failure since my heart attack a year ago. My physician initially prescribed lisinopril, an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor. Unfortunately, I was one of the unlucky people who got a cough with this drug that was so annoying I had to stop taking it. Now my doctor wants me to try a newer drug called valsartan. Is it likely to help me?
    Lee TH
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  • 6. Ask the doctor: My heart was damaged by two heart attacks. I know that ACE inhibitors help patients with heart failure, but I just can't take them. They make me cough. is there something else I can try?
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  • 7. Ask the doctor. I read in your newsletter and elsewhere that beta blockers can help people with heart failure, but my doctor has been reluctant to try them on me. Why is he so nervous?
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  • 8. Ask the doctor. A few months ago, I was diagnosed with atrial fibrillation. My doctor put me on blood thinners for a few weeks and then performed electrical cardioversion. Naturally, I was asleep during the procedure, but I understand that they shocked me twice and both times my heart briefly returned to a normal rhythm. But after a few seconds it went back into atrial fibrillation. NOw my doctor has offered me a choice. I can stay in atrial fibrillation and take a blood thinner for the rest of my life. Or I can try a medication to restore a normal heart rhythm and give cardioversion another try (but I'll probably have to take the antiarrhythmia drug for a long time). Any suggestions?
    Lee TH
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  • 9. Ask the doctor. My blood pressure has wide swings each day. It can go as high as 210/110 with even minor stress like grocery shopping, then fall to 100/50, which makes me tired and needing rest. I take 15 mg of isosorbide dinitrate and a slow-release nitrate for angina. I also take 10 mg of atenolol (Tenormin) to slow my heart rate. My doctor says I'm just a "reactive person." My diet is excellent, and I try to keep active. Could my adrenal glands have anything to do with this?
    Lee T
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  • 10. Ask the doctor. I have been taking a heart rhythm medicine to treat my atrial fibrillation. However, it is not working very well. Should I consider a catheter ablation procedure or try other medicines first?
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  • 12. 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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  • 13. Ask the doctor. Sometimes I take a walk while wearing my blood pressure cuff. For the first few minutes, as I walk at a modest pace, my systolic blood pressure rises from 115 to 130 or so, while my heart rate hardly changes from its usual 60-something beats per minute. But when I start walking faster, my systolic pressure stays steady or sometimes goes down a bit, while my heart rate increases to 110. Is this a normal pattern? Can you explain what is going on?
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  • 14. Ask the doctor. I've been taking estrogen since I reached menopause seven years ago, and it really helped my hot flashes and other symptoms. When I started these drugs, I was told they would lower my risk for osteoporosis and heart attacks, but I ve been reading lots of negative articles about how they may increase risk for heart problems. Should I stop them?
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  • 15. [Propafenone efficacy in preventing supraventricular tachycardia in childhood].
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  • 16. Ask the doctor. I take medicine to lower my cholesterol. My doctor says that I've reached my target (my LDL is just under 100 mg/dL), but I wonder whether I should try to get my cholesterol even lower. I haven't heard that you'll get hurt by taking too much of these drugs, so why shouldn't I increase my dose?
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  • 17. Ask the doctor. My chest x-ray report said that I had an "uncoiling aorta." My doctor told me that it just means that my aorta is getting longer as I am getting older and that it was normal. But if it was normal, why did they mention it in the report?
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  • 18. Ask the doctor. One day while I was gardening, I either slipped, hit my head, and passed out, or I passed out, fell, and hit my head. Since we couldn't tell, my doctors recommended I get a defribillator as "insurance" in case a heart rhythm problem was the cause. I have had the defribillator for eight years now, and it has never gone off. The battery is almost done and my doctor wants to put in a new battery. At age 86, I'd rather not have the procedure, the routine checkups are a hassle, and all of this is expensive. Could I just let the battery run down, then either leave the device in place or have it taken out?
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  • 19. [The efficacy of propafenon in the case of supraventricular atrioventricular tachycardia].
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