IMAGES

  1. ⇉Speech 100 Outline on Heart Disease Essay Example

    speech on heart disease

  2. Facts about Heart Diseases

    speech on heart disease

  3. Heart Disease: Diagnosis and Treatment

    speech on heart disease

  4. The 8 Types of Heart Disease

    speech on heart disease

  5. PPT

    speech on heart disease

  6. Cardiovascular Disease Infographic

    speech on heart disease

VIDEO

  1. 11/1/2023 Parkinson's Speech Exercises: World Ballet Day

  2. Persuasive Speech

  3. Talking heart health importance after actor's death

  4. English for Speech Pathology: Asking about Voice changes in Parkinson's Disease

  5. ARC TALKS: The Heart of The Matter: Cardiac Amyloidosis

  6. British Heart Foundation

COMMENTS

  1. Heart disease

    Symptoms of coronary artery disease can include: Chest pain, chest tightness, chest pressure and chest discomfort (angina) Shortness of breath. Pain in the neck, jaw, throat, upper belly area or back. Pain, numbness, weakness or coldness in the legs or arms if the blood vessels in those body areas are narrowed.

  2. All about the heart

    Surprising, but true: More women now die of heart disease than men, yet cardiovascular research has long focused on men. Pioneering doctor C. Noel Bairey Merz shares what we know and don't know about women's heart health -- including the remarkably different symptoms women present during a heart attack (and why they're often missed). 12:57.

  3. Speaking from the Heart: Could Your Voice Reveal Your Heart Health?

    Other research groups have explored the use of similar technology for a range of disorders, including Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease and COVID-19. For the new study, researchers recruited 108 patients who were referred for a coronary angiogram, an X-ray imaging procedure used to assess the condition of the heart's arteries ...

  4. Heart Disease Facts

    Heart disease is the leading cause of death for men, women, and people of most racial and ethnic groups in the United States. 1. One person dies every 33 seconds in the United States from cardiovascular disease. 1. About 695,000 people in the United States died from heart disease in 2021—that's 1 in every 5 deaths. 1,2.

  5. Heart Disease

    Coronary artery disease (also called coronary heart disease) is the most common type of heart disease. It happens slowly over time when a sticky substance called plaque builds up in the arteries that supply your heart muscle with blood. The plaque narrows or blocks blood flow to the heart muscle and can lead to other heart problems:

  6. Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs)

    Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the leading cause of death globally. An estimated 17.9 million people died from CVDs in 2019, representing 32% of all global deaths. Of these deaths, 85% were due to heart attack and stroke. Over three quarters of CVD deaths take place in low- and middle-income countries. Out of the 17 million premature deaths ...

  7. What is Cardiovascular Disease?

    Arrhythmia refers to an abnormal heart rhythm. There are various types of arrhythmias. The heart can beat too slow, too fast or irregularly. Bradycardia, or a heart rate that's too slow, is when the heart rate is less than 60 beats per minute. Tachycardia, or a heart rate that's too fast, refers to a heart rate of more than 100 beats per ...

  8. Heart Health: Conversation Starters

    It can be hard to talk to a family member or friend about making heart-healthy changes, but it's important. In fact, heart disease is the leading cause of death for both men and women in the United States. The good news is there's a lot people can do to lower their risk of heart disease. Use these tips to start a conversation about heart-healthy changes like quitting smoking or getting ...

  9. The Patient's Voice

    A. All of us who care for patients with heart disease see patients with complex and at times life-threatening issues. Our training concentrates expertise by helping us think through the complicated clinical problems that such patients present to us. Take, for example, a patient with mitral regurgitation (MR) in atrial fibrillation with new ...

  10. Cardiovascular diseases

    Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the leading cause of death globally, taking an estimated 17.9 million lives each year. CVDs are a group of disorders of the heart and blood vessels and include coronary heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, rheumatic heart disease and other conditions. More than four out of five CVD deaths are due to heart ...

  11. Congestive heart failure: Stages 1-4 symptoms and causes

    At stage D, people will have advanced structural heart disease and display significant symptoms, even when they are at rest. Symptoms. Symptoms may include: shortness of breath;

  12. Heart disease Informative Speech Outline

    Commonly known as heart disease and includes many different types of disorders: Such as heart attacks, high blood pressure, heart failure, stroke, and any disease that effect the heart, veins, and arteries. ... Heart disease Informative Speech Outline. Course: English Composition Ii (ENGL 102) 27 Documents. Students shared 27 documents in this ...

  13. Prevent Heart Disease

    Prevent Heart Disease. Get regular physical activity to help you maintain a healthy weight and lower your blood pressure, cholesterol, and blood sugar levels. By living a healthy lifestyle, you can help keep your blood pressure, cholesterol, and blood sugar levels normal and lower your risk for heart disease and heart attack.

  14. Heart disease: Voice pitch, amplitude may predict risk

    Coronary artery disease, the most common form of heart disease, affects 18.2 million individuals ages 20 years and older in the United States. Researchers at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN, in ...

  15. Arteriosclerosis / atherosclerosis

    Atherosclerosis is the buildup of fats, cholesterol and other substances in and on the artery walls. This buildup is called plaque. The plaque can cause arteries to narrow, blocking blood flow. The plaque can also burst, leading to a blood clot. Although atherosclerosis is often considered a heart problem, it can affect arteries anywhere in the ...

  16. The Sound of Your Voice May Diagnose Disease

    How you talk could reveal heart disease or concussions, say researchers and companies developing the novel technology. ... "Speech is a very, very, complicated mechanism," Poellabauer said.

  17. Cardiovascular Disease: Effects Upon Cognition and Communication

    Given that currently more than 71 million Americans present with one or more forms of CVD (American Heart Association, 2006), it is important for speech, language, and hearing clinicians to be aware of its cognitive and communicative consequences so that at-risk populations receive appropriate referrals for assessment and treatment services.

  18. Heart Failure: Can You Hear Risk in a Patient's Voice?

    From telephone conversations recorded between patients and nurses as part of a hospitals' telemedicine service, a vocal fingerprint identified was associated with increased risk of death (23%, 29% ...

  19. Cardiovascular disease

    Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a general term for conditions affecting the heart or blood vessels. It's usually associated with a build-up of fatty deposits inside the arteries ( atherosclerosis) and an increased risk of blood clots. It can also be associated with damage to arteries in organs such as the brain, heart, kidneys and eyes.

  20. Rheumatic heart disease

    Rheumatic heart disease is the most commonly acquired heart disease in people under age 25. Rheumatic heart disease and claims over 288 348 lives each year - the large majority in low- or middle-income countries. The disease results from damage to heart valves caused by one or several episodes of rheumatic fever, an autoimmune inflammatory ...

  21. How getting angry may increase the risk of heart disease, stroke

    FG Trade Latin/Getty Images. Even brief moments of anger can cause your blood vessels to constrict, raising cardiovascular disease risk, according to a new study. Researchers reported that other ...

  22. Persuasive Speech: Heart Disease Flashcards

    1. Heart- disease is a huge problem that American's struggle to overcome 2. The cause of this problem is that the younger generation does not have the motivation to workout 3. The solution to this problem is that, to maintain a healthy life-style one should workout for at least 30 minutes at least five days a week. Main point #1.

  23. 3 ways to protect your heart and brain this American Stroke Month

    During May, American Stroke Month, the American Stroke Association, a division of the American Heart Association, is raising awareness nationwide that stroke is largely preventable, treatable and beatable. Here are 3 ways you can act now to beat stroke: Learn how to spot a stroke F.A.S.T. If you see Face drooping, Arm weakness or Speech ...

  24. Feature

    These connections are also prevalent in patients who do not have acquired, but rather congenital heart disease. Rates of anxiety and depression in congenital heart disease are similar or higher than that of the general population, ranging from 31-33% for mood disorders like depression and 26-28% for anxiety. 9

  25. Hoarse Voice of A Failing Heart: Cardio-vocal Syndrome

    DISCUSSION: Cardio-vocal syndrome (CVS) is a rare condition in which the cardio-thoracic structures, classically an enlarged Left Atrium (LA), impinges on the left recurrent laryngeal nerve (LRLN) resulting in hoarseness of voice [2]. While Injury to the LRLN secondary to neck surgeries and extra-laryngeal malignancy are the most common cause ...

  26. Why letting go of anger is good for your health

    Heart disease, Stroke, Health news, Stress, British Heart Foundation Letting go of past grudges is vital to health after scientists found even brief bouts of anger from recalling memories impair ...

  27. WHO Director-General's speech at the World Hypertension Day event webinar

    Today we can celebrate the fact that three million people in 18 countries where the WHO HEARTS technical package has been implemented are better protected from heart disease. But we must not let progress falter. The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted essential health services for hypertension in over half of the world's countries.