Heart Wellness Rotating Header Image

Posts Tagged ‘illness’

Learning The Facts of Heart Valve Replacement Surgery

Seeing that it’s the most major organ in the body and the one that makes the rest of the body work, when something bad happens to the heart, fear is a rapid reaction.  Heart valve disease is when a valve in the heart doesn’t work the way it should.  It may be blocked from opening or closing all of the way thus not allowing blood flow to occur the way it wishes to for the body to work the way it should.  When this happens, heart valve replacement is a choice to repair the problem.  read more..

What Exactly Happens During Heart Valve Replacement Surgery

Anyone facing a major medical procedure has questions.  It is a smart idea to get them answered before the process so that you will be informed and not quite as frightened about what’s going to occur.  If you’re going to have heart valve replacement, you must ask your doctor for all of the particulars about what is going to occur before, during, and after the op so you can prepare yourself and know what can be expected.  read more..

Tracing the Evolution of Mitral Valve Prolapse for Heart Valve Surgical Procedures

The heart itself is a muscle with the responsibility of pumping blood throughout the body via an arrangement of interconnecting arteries, veins and heart valves referred to as the cardiovascular system. But, in order to know well about mitral valve displacement, one ought to know how the heart works. There are four chambers in the heart the right atrium, right ventricle, left atrium and left ventricle. The tricuspid valve sets apart the right chambers and mitral valve does the same with the left chambers. Oxygen poor blood flows from the body into the right atrium. The tricuspid valve opens in response to the heart beating and allows the blood from the right atrium to empty into the right ventricle. Then this blood is sent to the lungs for oxygenation. The oxygenated blood flows into the left atrium and then passes through the mitral valve into the left ventricle. read more..