WHAT IS CORONARY HEART DISEASE?
Heart disease is caused
by narrowing of the coronary arteries that feed the heart. Like any muscle, the heart needs a
constant supply of oxygen and nutrients, which are carried to it by the blood in the coronary arteries. When the
coronary arteries become narrowed or clogged by cholesterol and fat deposits--a process called atherosclerosis--and
cannot supply enough blood to the heart, the result is coronary heart disease (CHD).
If not enough oxygen-carrying blood reaches the
heart, you may experience chest pain called angina. If the blood supply to a portion of the heart is completely cut
off by total blockage of a coronary artery, the result is a heart attack. This is usually due to a sudden closure
from a blood clot forming on top of a previous narrowing.
waxy, fat-like substance that occurs naturally in all parts of the body and that your body needs
to function normally. It is present in cell walls or membranes everywhere in the body, including the brain, nerves,
muscle, skin, liver, intestines, and heart. Your body uses cholesterol to produce many hormones, vitamin D, and the
bile acids that help to digest fat.
It takes only a small amount of cholesterol in the blood to meet these needs. If you have too
much cholesterol in your bloodstream, the excess is deposited in arteries, including the coronary arteries, where
it contributes to the narrowing and blockages that cause the signs and symptoms of heart
disease.
See Article: Heart Attack
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