Posts Tagged blood pressure

Healthy Aging and your Workplace

More about your workplace and how it affects your health:
Some places that you work at can be dangerous to your health. They can cause you a lot of medical and mentally problems. We know you have to work, now days if you do not work your not going to get anywhere. We are not telling you to run off and quite your job but we want you to do your work safely. So talk a long look into your work environment to see if you are safe or not. Does your environment affect your health?

What are some of jobs that are bad for one to do?
Some of the jobs that are bad for your health are sawmills and other mills the reason for this is because of the small gains that you breath in your lungs. In sawmills, a person will breathe in the sawdust, which effects your respiratory system. Other types of mills a person will breathe in all the small gains like corn, or wheat, and what ever else they grain up. Breathing all this stuff can cause you to develop lung disease and/or lung cancer. Factories often cause bronchitis, allergies and so on.

People in the southern parts work in the coalmines. These people have it bad too for the same reason. When the person visits the doctor environment factors are considered, which doctors often find damage due to the chemicals in the atmosphere or environment?

Coalmines are filled with black Sid. Black Sid will causes diseases known as the black lung cancer. Once the disease is in your system, unless your doctor caught it at the first stage, usually a person is out of luck.

Jobs may include the ones where a person has to spray to kill the weeds and the bugs. Spray is used to terminate lime also. The crops require such sprays to grow healthy, yet a person breathing in these hard chemicals are at risk. The chemicals do not only kill what they are spraying, but it ends up killing the person slowly. These chemicals could cause lung cancer or lung disease. Alternatively, if you are one of the lucky ones that don’t get lung disease or cancer you just might various types of breathing problems.

What can I do to be safe while am at work?
When at work and you want to stay safe. You have options when it comes to workplace. You can play it smart and ask your supervisor if a mask is available. A caring supervisor will have one ready for you. If your supervisor does not offer you a mask, then you take it in your hands, go to your local drug store, and buy one for your own safety. In addition, make sure you wear the mask, it will help you in the end, since you will be better off than if you do not wear it.

What kind of mental problems can a job cause?
All jobs come with stress we have no control over. However, you can learn to control the stress that is put on you if you let stress control you that is bad for you. Stress will take control if you let it. We all have deadlines to meet as well as making sure we are doing our job the right way. Stress if out of control however can lead to high blood pressure, heart disease, or even a stroke. Just remember you have all the control to handle the stress or to let it handle you. If you learn to handle stress and wear mask you will live a healthier life so play it safe.

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Types of Dental Sedation

Many people suffer an intense, deep fear of having dental work done and they may go to extreme lengths to avoid it. Only the most severe pain of a dental abscess or other emergency will drive them to finally seek care. About 10% to 15% of Americans suffer this type of fear, which has been diagnosed as “Dental Phobia”. For these dental patients, some form of sedation is a blessing which helps them get through most dental procedures.

Dental Sedation Is Beneficial For The Patient Who:

  • Suffers from severe dental phobia
  • Has a high level of anxiety or fear about dental procedures
  • Is a patient with special needs, such as autism, which can make dental treatment quite difficult for both the patient and the dentist
  • Have an uncontrollable or severe gag reflex
  • Have a high tolerance for local anesthetics and “do not get numb”
  • Patients who have adverse reactions to local anesthetics
  • Patients who require extensive dental work and must have it completed within a limited number of visits.
  • Patients with certain medical conditions, such as cerebral palsy, which makes dental procedures difficult, uncomfortable or unsafe.

Patients should be encouraged to let their dentist know their level of fear and anxiety. The first visit is a good time to share this anxiety so an appropriate plan of treatment can be developed. It will take the patient’s fears into consideration as well as the type and amount of dental work that must be done. Adequate sedation must be planned for the patient that may need some lengthy dental procedures.

Types Of Dental Sedation

Oral Sedation
Medication such as Valium, Xanax, or Halcion is given to the patient the night before the appointment with a second dose about one hour before seeing the dentist. This helps relaxation and the patient remains awake and able to follow instructions. A local anesthetic is given so there is no pain at the site for the dental work.

Nitrous Oxide – “Laughing Gas”
This gas reduces anxiety and helps the patient become calm and relaxed. This is most effective when given to patients who have mild anxiety but will be having a relatively short, uncomplicated dental procedure. Gas is administered with a mask and local anesthesia is also used.

Intravenous Conscious Sedation
A medication is injected into a vein to produce a lowered state of consciousness. The patient can not smell, feel, or taste. Because there are different levels of sedation, a local anesthetic may be used in conjunction..  The patient’s blood pressure, pulse and heart rate are monitored as well as respiration rate. The level of oxygen in the patient’s blood is also observed closely. Sedation dentist are specially trained in dental anesthesia.

Deep Intravenous Sedation
This is a state that is between IV Conscious Sedation and Unconscious Dental Sedation. The patient is not able to respond to questions or follow simple instructions. These patients must be monitored closely and the blood pressure, heart and pulse rate are watched closely as well as their respiratory status. Advanced training is required to administer this type of dental anesthesia.

When the dental procedures are completed patients are observed closely until they are fully awake and their vital signs are stable. Dental sedation provides a way for patients with a high level of fear, as well as other problems, to have dental procedures carried out with relative ease.

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Vulnerable Plaque in Heart Disease

Swelling (inflammation) is the body’s natural reaction to an injury. Inflammation can happen anywhere on the skin, within the body, and even inside the arteries. Scientists are now learning inflammation may play a part in many of the diseases that come with aging, including coronary artery disease.

For many years, doctors have thought that the main cause of a heart attack or stroke or was the buildup of fatty plaque within an artery, leading to the heart or brain. In time, the plaque buildup would narrow the artery so much, that the artery would close off or become clogged by a blood clot. The lack of oxygen-rich blood to the heart would then lead to a heart attack. However these types of blockages cause only about 3 out of 10 heart attacks.
Researchers are finding people who that heart attacks do not have arteries severely narrowed by plaque! Vulnerable plaque may be buried inside the artery wall, and not bulge out and block the blood flow through the artery. This is why researchers began to look at how inflammation affects the arteries, and to see if inflammation could lead to a heart attack.

What they found was that inflammation leads to the development of “soft” or vulnerable plaque. They also found that vulnerable plaque was more than just debris, clogging an artery, that it was filled with different cell types that help with blood clotting.

When this inflammation is combined with other stresses, like high blood pressure, it can cause the thin covering over the plaque to crack and bleed, spilling the entire contents of the vulnerable plaque into the bloodstream. The sticky cytokines on the artery wall capture blood cells (mainly platelets) that rush to the site of injury. When these cells clump together, they can form a clot large enough to block the artery

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