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What You Don't Know About Heart Disease

... may be killing you. Our conversation with a top cardiologist will help you get heart smart.

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Every day a woman loses someone she loves to heart disease.

For Bonnie Arkus, that person was her mother, a vibrant woman in her 60s who remained unaware in the months leading up to her death that her cholesterol had skyrocketed. She attributed the unusual panic attacks she'd been experiencing to stress. She didn't know they actually were early warning signs of a heart attack. Bonnie's mother died from complications of bypass surgery.

Allison Cody also lost her mother to a heart attack when Allison was only 13. Her mom battled a heart condition and was one the first female teenagers to undergo open-heart surgery for the insertion of a pacemaker. She went on to live a full life, raising two daughters. Then, at 36, she suffered a sudden heart attack and died in her sleep.

Cardiovascular disease—which most often results in a heart attack or a stroke—is the number-one killer of women in the U.S. It claims more lives than cancer, osteoporosis, diabetes, pneumonia, or fatal injuries from an automobile accident. About 43 percent of women will die of heart disease. That equates to almost half a million women a year.

Because these numbers are sobering—and because not enough women realize the unique risks and symptoms they can experience with the disease—people such as Bonnie and Allison are working to spread awareness. Bonnie serves as the founder and director of the New Jersey-based Women's Heart Foundation. Allison, a recent graduate of Elon University, aspires to work for the American Heart Association.

For Allison, her mother's death became a turning point in her life. "The day she died, I became a Christian," she says. "I knew I wanted to see her in eternity."

She also realized how important it is not to take your health for granted. "When I hear of women dying of heart attacks who've not taken care of their bodies, I think it's a shame," Allison says. "I wonder, Why did you let your healthy heart go down the drain? You only have one heart and one life."

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Related Topics:
Exercise, Health, Heart Attack, Heart Disease, Stroke

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diado@shaw.ca

June 04, 20071:10p

I have Hemochromotosis...not a concern until I passed the age of 50. It is relatively common.....opposite of anemia, where your blood is too thick and too rich in iron. When I still had my period, the amount of blood I lost each month corrected the problem but now I am told that I should donate blood frequently, in order to thin the blood. There are many symptoms... but one is stroke... which is frankly quite scary to me. I just wondered if this was a common denominator in your survery

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