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BIOMARKERS

Molecular Biopsy of Human Tumors

- a resource for Precision Medicine *

126 related articles for article (PubMed ID: 27024804)

  • 1. Ask the doctor. Every year my doctor used to put me on a treadmill for a stress test. Now he doesn't. Why?
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  • 2. Ask the doctor. A hospital near me is advertising electron beam CT scanning of the heart to detect coronary artery disease. I don't have any symptoms of heart disease, but I did undergo this test--paying my own money, I would note! It came back with a fairly high calcium score, and the testing people told me to tell me doctor about it. My doctor says he doesn't know what to do with the information. Do you?
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  • 3. 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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  • 4. Ask the doctor. I was having occasional chest pains, and my primary care physician recommended a stress test. Because I have bad knees, the cardiologist had me take a stress test using a medication instead of doing exercise. Fortunately, the results were normal. But it made me wonder: is one type better than the other?
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  • 5. Ask the doctor. I am an 84-year-old man with atrial fibrillation, mild heart failure, and well-controlled high blood pressure. My doctor had me wear a Holter monitor and get a SPECT scan (which showed mild nonischemic cardiomyopathy). Now he wants me to have a cardiac MRI. What information would this test give that he doesn't already have?
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  • 6. Ask the doctor. I recently found out I have atrial fibrillation. My doctor wants me to take a blood thinner for a while and then have cardioversion. But I'll be away from home for a few months, so I'd like to hold off on the cardioversion until I get back. My doctor doesn't want me to delay. Why can't it wait?
    Lee TH
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  • 7. By the way, doctor... My father's memory has gotten a lot worse over the past year, but he doesn't seem to be aware of it. When I visited him recently, I saw what looked like some bad sores on his legs. He told me that he'd gone to the doctor recently and that everything was fine. Would it be wrong for me to call his doctor to find out for sure?
    Lee TH
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  • 8. 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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  • 9. Ask the doctor. A heart attack caused me to develop heart rhythm problems. These made it necessary for me to get an implantable cardioventer/defibrillator (ICD) that can shock my heart back to a normal rhythm. My medical story is a lot like Vice President Dick Cheney's, but my social situation isn't--I don't have anyone to drive me around. My doctor doesn't want me to drive. But depending on friends and family is a major problem, and we don't live near public transportation. Any suggestions?
    Lee TH
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  • 10. By the way, doctor... I like my doctor, but I can't help but notice that he doesn't seem to wash his hands before or after he examines me. Should I say something to him?
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  • 11. 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!
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  • 12. 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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  • 13. Ask the doctor. My doctor recently put me on Tenormin because my blood pressure was getting high. Now, when I run or row, I can't get my heart rate much above 115 beats per minute even though my peak heart rate should be 136. Is the beta blocker keeping me from getting the full benefit of exercise?
    Lee R
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  • 14. Ask the Doctor: Why didn’t a stress test warn me I was about to have a heart attack?
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  • 15. Ask the doctor: I take a water pill for swelling of my legs. My doctor tells me to put my feet up to help the fluid drain, but he also tells me to be active and walk around, which of course requires putting my feet down. Aren't these instructions contradictory?
    Lee TH
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  • 16. Ask the doctor. At 78 years old, I am in pretty good shape. A couple of years ago, an echocardiogram showed a small leak in my mitral valve. A year later, a follow-up test showed some leakage in my tricuspid valve. The valves aren't causing me any problems right now, but how wil I know if they need to be repaired? I like to exercise, but don't want to make these valve problems worse. Is it okay for me to walk on a treadmill at a speed of 3 to 4 miles an hour or lift light weights?
    Lee R
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  • 17. My doctor wants me to have an exercise stress test on a treadmill to measure how well my heart is working. But with arthritis in my hip, it's going to be really painful. Can it be done another way?
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  • 18. Ask the doctors. Why does my doctor tell me not to take ibuprofen as a painkiller until four or five hours after I take a daily aspirin pill? Doesn't ibuprofen also help prevent heart attacks, and if so, why not double up?
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  • 19. 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.
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  • 20. Ask the doctor. I have an electrocardiogram as part of my yearly checkup. After the last one, my doctor mentioned that my ST segment was longer this year than it was last year. He recommended that I have a stress test to check this out. I passed with flying colors. When I asked the cardiologist who did the stress test about the ST segment, he said the length isn't really important, that the height and shape are what matter. Can you explain?
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