ABSTRACT
MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
Peraka Pavan Sai Balaji*
Myocardial infarction (MI) occurs due to the slow buildup of plaque in arteries, leading to decreased blood flow, which subsequently injures the heart muscles, causing them oxygen starvation. The most common symptoms are pain and discomfort in the chest, dyspenea, perspiring, nausea, vomiting, irregular heartbeat patterns, anxiety, extreme tiredness, weakness, mental pressure, subdued feelings and other underlying reasons. Emergency Medical Responders can offer oxygen, give nitro-glycerine tablets, or treat the muscle tissue injury and blood clot with aspirin. The best way to cope with MI is to work on keeping track of body weight, diet, fat, cholesterol, and salt intake, monitoring blood pressure, as well as exercise and refraining from smoking, excessive drinking, or drug use. MIs can be treated in further detail using thrombolytic or clot-dissolving drugs, anti-hypertensives, painkillers, and nitro-glycerine. Suppressed pacing of life over the last fifty years recorded an outcome of patients' deaths being lower alongside new tech improvement garnering novel treatment. Methods of medical treatment improved dramatically but still had some gaps due to the three- and 0-day death rates of patients suffering with cardiogenic shock and undergoing palliative care. These methods starting from the 70s paved the way into the streamlined abdomen infractive method imprinted interfaces and eradicated the entire boundary of the heart muscle without recognition, while the counterpart had a boundary.
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