Heart disease – read the words and know early!

                   As the saying goes, if there is no disease, prevention is better than cure; if there is a disease, it is not too late to mend it. The key to heart disease prevention and treatment is “early”. So how to detect heart disease in the early stage? That is to observe the words: in addition to the common palpitations, precordial pain and other familiar symptoms of heart disease, there are often some physical signs and symptoms. If you pay attention to these aura symptoms, you can detect them early and treat them early.  These signs include: ◆Breathing: shortness of breath when doing some light activities or in a quiet state, but not accompanied by coughing and coughing up sputum. This condition is likely to be a sign of left heart insufficiency.  ◆Face: If the face is gray and purple with indifferent expression, this is a dangerous face in the advanced stage of heart disease. If the face is dark red, this is a characteristic of rheumatic heart disease and mitral valve stenosis. If it is pale, it may be a sign of incomplete mitral valve closure.  ◆Nose: If the nose is hard, this indicates too much fat accumulation in the heart. If the tip of the nose is swollen, it indicates that the heart fat may also be enlarging or the heart lesion is expanding. In addition, a red nose often indicates heart disease.  Skin: The skin of patients with chronic heart failure and advanced pulmonary heart disease may be dark brown or dark purple, which is related to the long-term lack of oxygen in the body tissues and the decrease of adrenal cortex function. The greenish purple color of skin mucosa and extremities indicates the lack of oxygen in the heart and the increase of reduced hemoproteins in the blood.  ◆Ear: Heart patients have different degrees of tinnitus performance in the early stage. This is because the microvascular power of the inner ear is abnormal, and the inner ear gets an aura signal before the disease causes a systemic reaction. If a coherent crease appears in your earlobe, it is most likely due to coronary artery sclerosis.  ◆Head and neck: If a table tendon extending from the clavicle to the direction of the earlobe bulges out, as thick as a pinky finger, it is likely that the right heart is not functioning properly.  ◆Shoulder: If there is a bout of soreness in the left shoulder and the inner side of the left arm when the weather is obviously fine, it may be due to coronary artery disease.  ◆Hands and feet: The ends of fingers or toes are obviously thick and the nail surface is raised like a drumstick, which is common in patients with chronic pulmonary heart disease or congenital cyanotic heart disease.  ◆Lower limbs: Edema in the lower limbs of middle-aged and elderly people is often a manifestation of obstruction of venous blood return due to cardiac insufficiency. In addition, if palpitations and shortness of breath from time to time are relieved only by squatting, this is a unique manifestation of violet pincer heart disease.  Pay attention to chest tightness and panic I found that many elderly people lack awareness of some of their symptoms, while some young people do not pay much attention to the appearance of symptoms such as chest tightness and panic, often thinking that it does not matter and that it will pass if they endure it. It is these thoughts that delay the best treatment time. Please be sure to pay attention to this.