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Known Causes of Heart Disease and How Cholesterol Plays a Role in This Condition

Keep monitoring your blood pressure and your side effects and working with your doctor to keep everything in the correct ranges. The benefits of taking the time to do this far outweigh the time it takes to monitor your situation, report the results to your doctor and to let your doctor know what your goals are. In my case, I also discovered that I was diabetic in the hospital when I had my heart attack (that was not a good day for me!). As it turns out that matters a lot in this particular area as many of the medications can be dangerous for people taking insulin. Make sure your cardiologist is aware of ALL your conditions and medications no matter who is treating you for them. This is necessary information in making decisions about what options and doses are safe for you.

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Known Causes of Heart Disease and How Cholesterol Plays a Role in This Condition

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  1. Known Causes of Heart Disease and How Cholesterol Plays a Role in This Condition The first option, and one you should always be in touch with, is to work with your doctor to adjust medication types and levels until you find one that is both effective in protecting your heart and has minimal side effects for you. Remember...do not stop your medications! That is not the adjustment I am talking about here. There are many medications that offer protection for your heart and differ in their strengths and side effects. They are also fast acting so it does not take months and years to know if something is going to work for you. Also potentially in the mix of your medication adjustments is that the strength of your heart and body will be changing over time, causing the effectiveness of your medication to change as well. So, what works today may not work in a couple of weeks. Keep monitoring your blood pressure and your side effects and working with your doctor to keep everything in the correct ranges. The benefits of taking the time to do this far outweigh the time it takes to monitor your situation, report the results to your doctor and to let your doctor know what your goals are. In my case, I also discovered that I was diabetic in the hospital when I had my heart attack (that was not a good day for me!). As it turns out that matters a lot in this particular area as many of the medications can be dangerous for people taking insulin. Make sure your cardiologist is aware of ALL your conditions and medications no matter who is treating you for them. This is necessary information in making decisions about what options and doses are safe for you. The second approach to defeating the medication zombie really boils down to discipline and force of will. It is not fun but regardless of how you adjust your medications some days they are just plain going to hit you harder than others. If your work situation is not flexible and understanding enough for you to just let those times fly and stay in bed or if they are very frequent (like they are with me) you will find that you need to learn to power through them. In our society most people do that with coffee, energy drinks or both. Those are a big "NO" for us. Before you have any chance of being successful at powering through the zombie effects you need to have the basics in place of sleep, nutrition and exercise. Having your body and mind at their strongest and most stable is your best and only friend in this situation. The only way I have ever found that really works is to make sure I have had enough high quality sleep, that I have eaten the right foods in the correct amounts and that I have been walking regularly. On the exercise front make sure you are following the program set up for you in your cardiac rehabilitation or in working with your cardiologist. There is a fine line we are walking on that one depending on the amount of damage to your heart and a professionally designed and monitored exercise program is a must for your safety. I have found that when I am in line in all these basic ways I can muster the strength and focus necessary to perform my work tasks well even when the side effects are smacking me in the head. Don't get me wrong...on those days I am absolutely wiped out when it is over but I can still earn my income and as long as I return to the sleep, eat and exercise discipline I get back to feeling stronger again pretty quickly. Sorry there was no magic solution to be found in this section. Take care of yourself and do what you need to do to be strong and safe. You will know quickly if you can adapt to your work environment safely or if you need to adapt your work situation to your new reality. https://healthcaredevotee.com/organifi-green-juice-review/ https://healthscrutiny.com/hypercet-blood-pressure-formula-review/ https://healthinfluencer.net/blood-balance-formula-review/ https://wedoreviewforyou.com/numerologist-review/

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