Coronary Insufficiency Acute

Acute conial insufficiency is a deadly disease that is the result of narrowing of a large vessel that supplies the heart with blood. This happens due to arterial hypertension (in 93% of cases), inflammatory processes or injuries of an atherosclerotic nature. It is diagnosed in 38-49% of all cases of chronic ischemic heart disease. Treatment begins as symptoms develop, although drug support may be required much later. The main threat of the disease is probable death, which is provoked by the occurrence of abundant thromboembolism of the air passage and heart attack. In 70% of patients, the pathology develops quickly and leads to tragedy within a few minutes. This is the time during which a person’s consciousness turns off, he does not react to others and simply dies. It is possible to save him from the moment when a person stops breathing until his death by performing resuscitation (manually and using hardware) only in 2% of cases. The main structures of the nervous system (brain, spinal cord) suffer the same in half of the survivors.



An acute coronary event is the result of a sudden, severe blockage of any of the coronary or small arteries supplying the heart. In this case, as a rule, there is a sharp decrease in blood flow velocity of less than 175 ml/min, causing myocardial ischemia or myocardial infarction, not to mention