Patients with a heart attack with fluid in the lungs should be seen in the emergency department or cardiovascular medicine.
Heart attack is acute myocardial infarction, and myocardial infarction is a critical cardiovascular disease that can be seen in the emergency department or cardiovascular medicine. When a patient has a heart attack, the heart’s ability to contract and diastole is weakened, and cardiac output is reduced, which can cause heart failure, low blood pressure, and fluid buildup in the lungs, resulting in symptoms such as dizziness, coughing, dyspnea, palpitations, and chest pain accompanied by a sense of impending death.
If patients do not receive timely treatment is likely to be life-threatening, should follow the doctor’s instructions for the first time through the urokinase, streptokinase and other drugs for thrombolysis, or percutaneous coronary intervention in order to save the patient’s life, but also through the β-blocker (eg, metoprolol) and other drugs as prescribed by the doctor to carry out the treatment.
Patients with heart attack and pulmonary effusion should go to the emergency department or cardiology department of the hospital as soon as possible to get a clear diagnosis and receive standardized treatment under the guidance of the doctor, so as to avoid delaying the condition and causing adverse consequences, and the medication should be taken under the guidance of the physician.