04/07/2011

Heart Infection

Causes, Incidence, And Risk Factors
  • Heart failure is a chronic, long-term condition, although it can sometimes develop suddenly.
     
  • The condition may affect only the right side or only the left side of the heart. These are called right-sided heart failure or left-sided heart failure. More often, both sides of the heart are involved.
     
  • Heart failure is present when the following changes are present:
     
  • Your heart muscle cannot pump, or eject, the blood out of the heart very well. This is called systolic heart failure.
     
  • Your heart muscles are stiff and do not fill up with blood easily. This is called diastolic heart failure.
     
  • Both of these problems mean the heart is no longer able to pump enough oxygen-rich blood out to the rest of your body, especially when you exercise or are active.
     
  • As the heart's pumping action is lost, blood may back up in other areas of the body, causing fluid to build up in the lungs, the liver, the gastrointestinal tract, and the arms and legs. As a result, there is a lack of oxygen and nutrition to organs, which damages them and reduces their ability to work properly.
     
  • Perhaps the most common cause of heart failure is coronary artery disease (CAD), a narrowing of the small blood vessels that supply blood and oxygen to the heart. For information on this condition and its risk factors,