A Warning About Heart Disease

Living with Angina and Coronary Heart Disease

Saturday, 2 August 2008

Most Of You Have It And Don't Know

Whichever part of the world you live or work in, if you have recently had a stroke, or been diagnosed with angina - and are as angry as hell - you need guidance, because you have just started out on a journey along 'Cardiac Road'. Perhaps you are a veteran of the disease, struggling through the pain? Or maybe you are desperate; a long-suffering carer of someone with a heart problem? If so, you need help too, even more perhaps. If someone who you know, suffers from this terrible disease, you have a duty to spread the word about the simple Cholesterol Test which can be taken to save lives. This book will help you too. You may see the mistakes before you make them. The inevitable process towards open-heart surgery can be frightening, and even after facing it, we still have to encounter a terrible post-operative trauma, and need help to fight it. Many of us may have been bemused by the whole damn thing anyway, and just dont know what to do, but face it we must. This book will help you to do it. Maybe a cardiologist failed to tell you, that you have angina because you suffer from coronary heart disease, or that you will be faced with debiltating emotional trauma as your disease progresses? In either case, you need to understand what has happened to you clearly, so that you can prepare to fight it. We can beat anything if we know what we are fighting. These first steps along Cardiac Road are just the beginning, and to avoid the inevitable problems along the way, we must adjust our lifestyle, and get our cholsterol down. Make a start now, by purchasing your copy of 'Cardiac Road', it will help you. Nationality has no meaning where Angina and Coronary Heart Disease is found, but important differences do exist, especially for those in the USA who have to pay for their pain.(Many of us should remember this and be thankful). Doctors, nurses, technicians and Cardiac Rehabilitation professionals, no matter where they work, are sometimes swamped by the disease, and may overlook the patients feelings in their endeavour. It is our duty to remind them how we perceive them as they treat us.