What causes blockage in the Widowmaker?

A widowmaker heart attack
heart attack
A myocardial infarction (commonly called a heart attack) is an extremely dangerous condition caused by a lack of blood flow to your heart muscle. The lack of blood flow can occur because of many different factors but is usually related to a blockage in one or more of your heart's arteries.
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occurs when the left anterior descending (LAD) artery
left anterior descending (LAD) artery
The left anterior descending artery (also LAD, anterior interventricular branch of left coronary artery, or anterior descending branch) is a branch of the left coronary artery. Blockage of this artery is often called the widow-maker infarction due to a high death risk.
https://en.wikipedia.org › Left_anterior_descending_artery
, which supplies blood to the larger, front part of the heart, is blocked at its origin
. “This artery delivers a major amount of blood to your heart,” Dr. Rampersad explains.
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How do you detect a Widowmaker blockage?

You can prevent the widowmaker by making key lifestyle changes (and we'll get to those) but the best way to get checked is with a regular cardiac scan to assess your coronary calcium score. This test assesses the amount of calcium deposits in the heart and a high score may indicate a potential plaque build up.
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How can you prevent a Widowmaker having a heart attack?

How to Prevent a Widowmaker Heart Attack
  1. Understand your archenemy. ...
  2. Calculate your own heart attack risk. ...
  3. Ask about these other important tests: ...
  4. Factor in Uncle Fred:
  5. Adopt a no-fad diet: ...
  6. Exercise the right way: ...
  7. Take your meds, if recommended:
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How do you fix a Widowmaker?

Two surgeries can treat a widowmaker: coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) or angioplasty plus stenting. Both procedures restore blood flow to the front of your heart. CABG is usually best for a total blockage in the LAD.
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What is the survival rate of the Widow Maker?

A heart attack from a blockage in the main artery that goes down the front of the heart, known as the widowmaker, is often the most fatal. According to the American Heart Association, the survival rate following a widowmaker heart attack is only 12% when it occurs outside of a hospital or advanced care center.
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Steering Clear of the Widow Maker



Can you survive the Widowmaker?

According to a TIME Magazine article, the AHA reports that only about 12 percent of people who suffer this type of heart attack away from a hospital survive. The statistics increase to a 25 percent survival rate for those who happen to be in the hospital at the time of the heart attack.
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Is The Widowmaker genetic?

What are the risk factors? The risk factors for a widowmaker heart attack, as with any heart attack, are primarily lifestyle choices or genetic factors that affect your cholesterol levels. If heart attacks run in your family, you're more likely to have one.
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Can you put a stent in the Widowmaker?

“Many people can survive widow-makers if we get them treatment right away,” Niess said. And the patient's blocked artery can often be reopened with a stent, he added. Like other types of heart attack, this one is largely preventable.
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What are signs of a Widow Maker?

A patient experiencing a widowmaker would have typical heart attack symptoms of arm and chest pain, lightheadedness or shortness of breath, among others. “It's not different from any other heart attack; it's just in a more critical area,” Chetcuti says.
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Which artery is the most common to have blockage?

Importance in cardiovascular diseases:

The LAD artery is the most commonly occluded of the coronary arteries. It provides the major blood supply to the interventricular septum, and thus bundle branches of the conducting system.
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What is the deadliest type of heart attack?

All heart attacks are serious, but one type of is the most dangerous of all and it's known as a STEMI (ST segment elevation myocardial infarction), or a widowmaker heart attack.
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How much blockage requires a stent?

“For a cardiac stent procedure to qualify as a medical necessity, it is generally accepted that a patient must have at least 70% blockage of an artery and symptoms of blockage,” Justice Department attorneys wrote.
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Can you put a stent in a 100 blocked artery?

Coronary arteries with severe blockages, up to 99%, can often be treated with traditional stenting procedure. Once an artery becomes 100% blocked, it is considered a coronary chronic total occlusion, or CTO. Specialized equipment, techniques and physician training are required to open the artery with a stent.
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How much artery blockage is normal?

A moderate amount of heart blockage is typically that in the 40-70% range, as seen in the diagram above where there is a 50% blockage at the beginning of the right coronary artery. Usually, heart blockage in the moderate range does not cause significant limitation to blood flow and so does not cause symptoms.
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Does a stress test show blockages?

“Most people think a stress test identifies blockages to the heart, but it does not,” explains Aristotelis Vlahos, M.D., director of the Cardiac Catheterization Lab at Riverview Medical Center. “It looks at blood flow to the heart muscle and determines if blood flow is adequate or not.
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What is the best test to check for clogged arteries?

A CT coronary angiogram can reveal plaque buildup and identify blockages in the arteries, which can lead to a heart attack. Prior to the test, a contrast dye is injected into the arm to make the arteries more visible. The test typically takes 30 minutes to complete.
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How long do heart stents last?

How long will a stent last? It is permanent. There is just a 2–3 per cent risk of narrowing coming back, and if that happens it is usually within 6–9 months. If it does, it can potentially be treated with another stent.
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Can a CT scan detect blocked arteries?

Overall, non-invasive CT angiograms accurately detected or ruled out artery blockages in 91 percent of patients, compared with 69 percent for stress testing.
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What is better a stent or bypass?

Patients with severe coronary artery disease generally fared better with bypass surgery than with stents to open blocked arteries, according to a major new multinational study led by Stanford Medicine investigators.
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Can you have good blood pressure and still have clogged arteries?

Although high blood pressure is common, it's not harmless. High blood pressure is a major cause of atherosclerosis, the artery-clogging process that leads to heart attacks and strokes. Blood pressure higher than 130/80 is seen in: 69% of people who have their first heart attack.
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Does having a stent shorten your life?

Summary: While the placement of stents in newly reopened coronary arteries has been shown to reduce the need for repeat angioplasty procedures, researchers from the Duke Clinical Research Institute have found that stents have no impact on mortality over the long term.
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How often should a heart stent be checked?

The timing of follow-up. As recommended in the German National Disease Management Guidelines, patients with CHD and those who have undergone stent implantation should be followed up regularly (every 3 to 6 months) by their primary care physicians.
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How many stents can be done at once?

In answer to your first question, in some cases doctors can place two or even three stents during one procedure. There are, however, cases in which the cardiologist will want to place one and then place a second or even a third stent in a later procedure.
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Does Lipitor reduce plaque?

A: Yes. There have been several clinical studies — many of them done here at Cleveland Clinic — that show statins can reverse plaque buildup. Two statins in particular, atorvastatin, which is sold under the brand name Lipitor, and rosuvastatin, which is sold under the brand name Crestor, are the strongest statins.
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Why is it called Widowmaker?

A heart attack is particularly dangerous when it's caused by blockage in the left anterior descending artery, which supplies blood to the larger, front part of the heart, earning it this scary-sounding nickname.
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