1 / 13

CURRENT HEALTH PROBLEMS IN MALAYSIA: “Cardiovascular Disease - Heart Failure”

CURRENT HEALTH PROBLEMS IN MALAYSIA: “Cardiovascular Disease - Heart Failure”. By: Shiraaj bin Mohd Rasol Siti Nooraini binti Mohamad Yusof. DEFINITION:. Cardiovascular disease refers to the class of diseases that involve the heart or blood vessels (arteries and veins)*

bdavenport
Télécharger la présentation

CURRENT HEALTH PROBLEMS IN MALAYSIA: “Cardiovascular Disease - Heart Failure”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CURRENT HEALTH PROBLEMS IN MALAYSIA: “Cardiovascular Disease - Heart Failure” By: Shiraaj bin Mohd Rasol Siti Nooraini binti Mohamad Yusof

  2. DEFINITION: • Cardiovascular disease refers to the class of diseases that involve the heart or blood vessels (arteries and veins)* • The No. 1 Fatal Disease in MALAYSIA and WHOLE world • Mainly Heart Failure- Inability of cardiac output to meet the demand of the body *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardiovascular_disease

  3. CURRENT STATUS:

  4. LIFE STYLE: • Smoking: - Prevalence: 21% (1985) - 31% (2000) - aged 15 ≥ - total of (ext) 5 mil. smokers; 14 ciggarettes/day - “National Healthy Lifestyle Campaign”- 43% attempted to quit- majority failed source: Clinical Practice Guideline on Treatment of Tobacco Use and Dependence, 2003, Ministry of Health, Malaysia

  5. LIFESTYLES: • Food: - lack of awareness of importance of proper diet - Use of high risk factors; condensed milk, oil - National Healthy lifestyle campaign*: - ban fast food advertisements on children's television to curb obesity and diet-linked diseases - food manufacturer to label their products with calorie content charts source:* Sean Yoong, Associated Press Writer  |  March 5, 2007

  6. LIFESTYLES: • Exercise: - Inc. awareness at school level - more thorough physical education system - Benefits*: - Flexibility exercises such as stretching improve the range of motion of muscles and joints. - Aerobic exercises such as cycling, walking, running, hiking, and playing tennis focus on increasing cardiovascular endurance. -Anaerobic exercises such as weight training, functional training or sprinting increase short-term muscle strength. source: www.wikipedia.com/exercise

  7. ETIOLOGY • 1) Heart attack - damaged heart muscle = “acute myocardial infarction” • 2) Prolonged pumping against a chronically increased afterload – eg: during hypertension and stenotic valves

  8. Heart Failure – Primary Defect • Differential Diagnosis: 1) abnormal QRS waveform – “ stress test ” 2) echocardiography 3) characteristics enzyme released cardiomocytes – measurement of concentration in blood • cardiac contractility ejection pressure reduced V of stroke volume

  9. Compensated Heart Failure • symphatetic activity contactility towards normal • at kidneys, due to blood flow, it retain : - [salt] -V of water during urine formation • blood V source: Human Physiology (International Student Association), Lauralee Sherwood

  10. De-compensated Heart Failure • = A point where heart could no longer pump normal stroke volume – DESPITE compensatory measure • Result: 1) Forward Failure: failure of heart to pump adequate amount of blood to the tissues –lowered stroke V 2) Backward Failure: Blood unable to enter and leave blood dam up at venous system - “ congestive heart failure ”

  11. Systolic VS Diastolic Failure • Systolic = Decreased cardiac contractility • Diastolic = Heart has trouble filling

  12. HEALTH STATUS in MALAYSIA • World leader in surgical gloves and catheters (rubber based) - most supplies are imported - Government encourages manufacture of more expensive and advanced equipment • shortages in the number of doctors and other medically trained personnel – ‘quick-fix’ solution: recruitment of 1,000 foreign doctors + increased scholarship for medicine study abroad • Ninth Malaysia plan (2006-2010); - RM2.0 billion-spent on developing rural health services, an increase of more than 150% from 2001-2005. - R&D, that saw only RM28.9 million in the last five years, receive RM250.0 million. - Allocation for training has tripled.

  13. THE END…. Thank you for your attention…

More Related