VASCULAR ARTERY DISEASE
CAROTID ARTERY DISEASE
PERIPHERAL ARTERY DISEASE
CORONARY ARTERIES DISEASES
(New medical branch of treatment in mathematical machine of Sikander Aqeel)
Daily population is increasing of earth, where your need is easy faster and cheap medical science for treatment own body,
First you should understand about treatment, (That what is the treatment)
actually treatment is an appetite of sick cells, such as you gathers all things (milk, sugar, coffee, tea pack, bread, **er) before cook breakfast, if you will not gather this all things, then you cannot get breakfast, so the here breakfast is an appetite of stomach cells,
If you take medicines from one hole of mouth, here I am introducing fifteen thousand billion holes to take medicines, and this process will work like super-sonic speed for health, and bath-tub yoga treat is better than Surgery, because surgery cannot repair any part of body,
Water and occipital lobe
Water and temporal lobe
Water and frontal lobe
Water and Cerebellum lobe
VASCULAR ARTERY DISEASE
A system of flexible tubes -- some big, some very tiny -- move fluids throughout your body. If they were stretched end-to-end, there would be enough to circle the Earth multiple times.
Some of them move blood. As your heart beats, it pumps blood with oxygen and nutrients to feed your tissues and carry off waste. Arteries move blood away from the heart. Veins return it.
Lymph vessels and lymph nodes are part of a cleaning system that removes damaged cells from your body. They also help protect your body from infections and cancer. The vessels pick up fluid from tissues throughout your body. That fluid eventually drains back into veins under your collarbones.
This whole network of vessels is known as your vascular or circulatory system. "Vascular" comes from a Latin word for hollow container. Any condition that affects this system is considered vascular disease. The diseases range from problems with your arteries, veins, and vessels that carry lymph to disorders that affect how blood flows. A disease can lead to your tissues not getting enough blood, a condition called ischemia, as well as other serious even life-threatening problems.
Atherosclerosis and Peripheral Artery Disease
Coronary arteries supply blood to your heart muscle. Peripheral arteries carry blood to other tissues and organs throughout your body. Both can have deposits of fat,cholesterol, and other substances on their inside walls. These deposits are known as plaque. Over time, plaque can build up, narrowing the vessel and making it hard for blood to flow.
Eventually, the artery will be so narrow that your body's tissues don't get enough blood. Depending on where it happens, you can have different symptoms and problems. For example:
• Blockage in coronary arteries can cause chest pain (angina) or a heart attack.
• If it's in the carotid arteries that supply your brain, it can lead to a stroke or mini stroke, which is called a transient ischemic attack or TIA.
• Blockage in the kidneys can lead to trouble with how they work, uncontrolledhigh blood pressure, and heart failure.
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• A blockage in a leg can lead to leg pain or cramps when you're active -- a condition called claudication -- skin color change, sores or ulcers, and your legs feeling tired.
When you don't have any blood flow to a part of your body, the tissues could die. If that happens, you may lose a limb or an organ.
DEFINITION OF VASCULAR PLAQUE
It is fourth diseases of sweet-plaque in arteries, which makes clots of blood from stickiness of extra sugar in blood,
1 = stickiness of extra sugar in blood = sweet-plaque
2 = stickiness of extra sugar in blood = blood clots
Sweet-plaque + blood clots = progressive diseases may occur suddenly if an embolism occurs, or when a blood clots rapidly develops in a blood vessel restricted by an atherosclerotic Sweet-plaque, and blood flow quickly cut off,
Sweet-plaque + blood clots = A term used to describe a group of diseases that involve pathophysological changes in the “peripheral” arteries (i.e., including the coronary arteries, or veins resulting in blood flow disturbance,
Sweet-plaque + blood clots = Absolute rick of CVD among those with diabetes remains 2-fold greater compared with person without diabetes, Atherosclerotic process in diabetes not really distinct from that the non-diabetic, starts earlier progresses faster and more diffuse,
Sweet-plaque + blood clots = the valves open and blood moves through the tubes. When your muscles relax, the valves close so the blood only flows in one direction, damaged valves may not close completely as your muscles relax. This allows blood to flow in both directions, and it can pool
Sweet-plaque + blood clots = Varicose veins are an example of this. They may bulge like purple ropes under your skin; they can also look like small red or purple bursts on your knees, calves, or thighs. These spider veins are caused by swollen small blood vessels called capillaries. At the end of the day, your legs might ache, sting, or swell.
Sweet-plaque + blood clots = More women than men get varicose veins, and they often run in families, Pregnancy, being very overweight, or standing for long times can cause them, because the blood is moving more slowly, it may stick to the sides of the veins, and clots can form.
Sweet-plaque + blood clots = A blood clot in a vein inside a muscle, usually in your lower leg, thigh, or pelvis, is a deep vein thrombosis (DVT). If it breaks loose and travels to your lungs, it becomes a pulmonary embolism (PE). These clots in your veins are called venous thromboembolisms, or VTE
Sweet-plaque + blood clots = A blood clot in a vein inside a muscle, usually in your lower leg, thigh, or pelvis, is a deep vein thrombosis (DVT). If it breaks loose and travels to your lungs, it becomes a pulmonary embolism (PE). These clots in your veins are called venous thromboembolisms, or VTE
Sweet-plaque + blood clots = they’re usually caused by: Conditions that slow blood flow or make blood thicker, such as congestive heart failure and certain tumors Damaged valves in a vein Damaged veins from injury or infection
• Genetic disorders that make your blood more likely to clot Hormones,
• Sweet-plaque + blood clots = Higher-than-normal levels of clot-forming substances, including fibrinogen, factor 8, and prothrombin
• Not enough blood-thinning (anticoagulant) proteins, including antithrombin, protein C, and protein S Trouble breaking down fibrin, the protein mesh that holds clots together Damage to the endothelium, the lining of the blood vessel,