♥ DÍA MUNDIAL DEL CORAZÓN

  • 2 days ago
♥ DÍA MUNDIAL DEL CORAZÓN

El cardiólogo Mario Bokis, destaca la relevancia de prestar atención a los síntomas cardiovasculares y realizar chequeos regulares.

Seguí en #VivoElDomingo
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00:00September 29 and not only the day of the gnocchi, which we are going to eat in a little while, but it is also the world day of the heart, something that keeps us alive, just before entering here with the author of Villa Morte, Tomás Aspirinas, by descendancy of family heart problems.
00:22Heart patients, right? Obviously we are going to ask the one who knows, but I say it is always important in this case, the relevant studies and at all ages.
00:34At all ages.
00:35Because you saw that there is always one thing floating around, well, yes, bigger, then you find them. No, no, no.
00:40Always.
00:41Always.
00:42Dr. Mario Voskis is connected with us, obviously a specialist in all this, on such a particular day. Mario, how are you doing? Good morning, welcome to Vivo el Domingo. What is the consultation or the alert or the most recurrent, what one has to pay attention to regarding the heart?
01:05How are you? Good morning. Well, thank you very much for the contact. Today is the world day of the heart. It is an interesting day because it helps us a little to raise awareness about what we have, I was just listening to them, we have this little heart here in the middle of the chest that has been working all day for many years, since the fifth week of intrauterine life, imagine, right?
01:27So you have to take care of that muscle. Well, going back to your question, let's see, the most frequent consultations that we have, I can divide them into two. On the one hand, there are those who consult for symptoms, that is, any symptom that is a little pain in the chest or a pain in the chest, really important, lack of air, or a feeling of feeling the heart, what we call palpitations, consult.
01:54Consult the doctor because it can be a sign of a cardiovascular disease. You don't have to feel the heart, right? When you feel it, it's because something is working differently, because you get used to the heartbeat, you don't feel it, but when you feel it, it's because something is going weird.
02:08Look, that's how it is, that is, one can feel the heart in some circumstances that we call physiological. For example, if you get a big scare, you are walking down the street, you are going to cross an avenue and a group of people comes to see you, you are going to feel the heart because of the release of adrenaline, you are going to feel the heartbeat.
02:25The problem is when you feel it, for example, to be sitting as we are now, or we are watching television, or we walk a little and we feel something abnormal, which can be, I already tell you, an irregular rhythm, that is, heartbeats but with jumps, in short, something that catches your attention, as I say, when you feel, consult.
02:45And the second is those who come, and I also heard them at the beginning, to do the famous control, check-up, or as we say, the cardiovascular service. Oil filter and battery.
03:01Then they come to you and say, Doc, look, I don't feel anything, I think I'm fine. For example, I want to start doing a sport, I want to go running, I want to play tennis, or I don't know, any sport that you can think of that you like to practice. Look, I want to do a control. And that's where we start using different tools that we have to see how the heart is and the cancer, which are the arteries.
03:28I want to ask you, and well, I bet you'll answer me from the bottom of your heart, the importance of RCP when it comes to saving lives.
03:40Yes, let's see, very important. You noticed that when, unfortunately, there is a case of sudden death, that is, someone who has a cardiopulmonary arrest, where is the doctor? The doctor is not in the vast majority of cases, because the doctor is in the sanatorium or in the hospital.
03:57And you, we have to take into account that almost 50 or 70 percent, I would tell you sometimes, of cases of sudden death happen on the street, at home, in the club, during a sports competition, in short, we have seen examples in recent times of athletes who fall fainted.
04:19The importance of maneuvers is that you don't have to be a doctor, they are very fast to learn, they are extremely simple to apply and really save lives. Because if you act quickly, in what we call the golden minute, you have a 70% chance that that victim, that person, comes to life in a hospital.
04:40And the defibrillator, we call it the DEA, as an acronym, external automatic defibrillator. Fundamental and perfect your question, because it is associated with maneuvers. When you start doing the maneuvers, the first thing you do is someone who is watching, you tell him, look, call 911 or activate the emergency and bring a DEA.
05:03And people have to have the acronym and the DEA is the device that is fantastic because you don't need any knowledge, they put two patches on your chest, which is that equipment, it is totally automatic, it senses if you have arrhythmia and defibrillates it, that is, it has an electric shock that helps to restore the heart rate, which helps a lot to the possibilities of success, of resuscitation.
05:30Doctor, good morning. A few minutes ago we were talking about a case of heart failure. Today is World Heart Day. Why does the heart associate with love directly?
05:42You know that, well, for many years, since ancient times, the heart has always been associated with love. And well, I always ask patients, when someone asks me one of those questions, I say, look, have you ever been in love? Most of them will tell you yes.
05:57But don't you feel the heart that beats or that goes faster when you see the loved one? Well, that's because of the release of catecholamines, because of a stimulus in which there are also hormones of love, dopamine, serotonin, oxytocin, which also somehow make the heart feel and beat.
06:19That's why the association and that round little heart, which doesn't have much to do with what the real structure of the heart is, but it seems.
06:29And why is it drawn like this? Because he painted the shape of the heart?
06:34As I always say, this shape is correct, it is the ventricles, it lacks the cap, which are the auricles, and more or less we are getting closer.
06:44That's why Dr. Roberto Maguidana has also changed in this last time, and there is even an emoji that is made with the hands, as well as in cross, which represents a bit what you say, the exit of the auricles, and it is true, the emoji of the heart has changed a bit.
07:08Yes, that's right. Now, with artificial intelligence and the possibility of three-dimensional graphics, it is changing a bit, but anyway, it is good to see that when people talk about the heart, they have the idea that the heart is a very noble organ, it is a muscle.
07:29Like any muscle, it needs a good irrigation, and that irrigation is given, there you see a common pipe that passes through the middle, those are the coronary arteries, and those are the arteries that must be taken care of, because they are the ones that really, when they are covered, are responsible for generating myocardial infarction and heart death, which we don't want to happen, because it strongly impacts the longevity or life expectancy of a person.
07:57Well, doctor, thank you very much, from the bottom of my heart.
08:01It was good, huh?
08:04You didn't ask me about it.
08:06Very good, doctor. Thank you very much. Today is Heart Day 29, and it is always good to talk to these professionals, who help us to become aware, and it is two very clear facts.
08:16First, love filled with the heart.

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