Angina pectoris

Angina pectoris

Angina pectoris is a disease that has much in common with asthma. However, unlike asthma, an attack of which can last several hours, an attack of angina pectoris is fleeting: it is a spasm of the artery that prevents blood flow, due to which the patient is deprived of oxygen and can die very quickly. This serious illness can occur due to physical or emotional stress, especially against the background of a diseased heart.

Diabetes also predisposes you to angina pectoris. During an attack, the patient feels a severe headache, a burning sensation in the pit of the stomach, and excruciating fear.

At the onset of an attack, you need to apply mustard plaster to your heart, and dry jars on your back. It is advisable to lie still, then the pain will gradually subside and the attack will lose its threatening character.

It is beneficial to take vitamin B15, as well as eat ox liver and drink fresh ox blood. Such patients should not smoke, as nicotine narrows the arteries.



Angina pectoris or angina pectoris (lat. angūna pectorīs), the same non-classical angina pectoris, is a form of clinical picture of coronary artery disease, characterized by typical anginal pain, radiating to the left arm or jaw, suddenly appearing, short-lived and quickly passing after taking nitroglycerin or stopping physical activity. The diagnosis is based primarily on the characteristic clinical picture and is confirmed by ECG data and the results of stress tests.