medicine drugs
heart attack
Heart attack: The death of heart muscle due to the loss of blood supply. The loss of blood supply is usually caused by a complete blockage of a coronary artery, one of the arteries that supplies blood to the heart muscle. Death of the heart muscle, in turn, causes chest pain and electrical instability of the heart muscle tissue.
 
 
 
 

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Medications

The knowledge gained in the past years regarding acute coronary syndromes and what happens in the artery during a heart attack has helped guide medical treatment. The  goals of medication therapy are to break up or prevent blood clots, prevent platelets  from gathering and sticking to the plaque, stabilize the plaque, and prevent further  ischemia. These medications must be given as soon as possible (within 30 minutes from the start of heart attack symptoms) to decrease the amount of damage to the heart muscle. The longer the  delay in starting these drugs, the more damage that occurs and the less benefit they can provide.

Medications given  right after the start of a heart attack may include:

  • aspirin
  • thrombolytic therapy ("clot busters")
  • heparin
  • other antiplatelet drugs
  • any combination of the above

Other drugs, given during or after a heart attack lessen your heart's work, improve the functioning of the heart, widen or dilate your blood vessels, decrease your pain, and guard against any life-threatening heart rhythms. Your doctor will prescribe the appropriate medications for you.

Interventional procedures

During or shortly after a heart attack, you may go to the cardiac catheterization laboratory to directly evaluate the status of your heart, arteries and the amount of heart damage. In some cases, procedures (such as angioplasty or stents ) are used to open up your narrowed or blocked arteries. These procedures may be combined with thrombolytic therapy to open up the narrowed arteries, as well as to break up any clots that are blocking them.

source: http://www.clevelandclinic.org/heartcenter/pub/guide/
disease/cad/mi_treatment.htm?index=10480

 

 

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