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What Ischemic Heart Disease

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Berta

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Ischemic heart disease, as a new AO presumptive, will certainly bring many more Agent Orange claims into the VA system.

With proof of AO exposure these claims should be very easy for the VA to rate and award.

The biggest problem with these claims that I foresee is that the VA will not have adequate evidence to determine IHD as many vets with IHD might have CAD or CHF in their records as well as other medical terms that in fact mean IHD diagnosis -but maybe the VA could misinterpret this.Or a C & P doctor could opine inaccurately on this AO disease.

I was talking to notable Vets lawyer Doug Rosinki a few weeks ago ago who had answered a vets question as to CHF-Congestive Heart Failure -which may not be ischemic heart disease at all. In his opinion-as ischemia has certain medical facets unlike other types of cardiomyopathy.He is right.

Terms like atherosclerosis, hyperlipedimia, peripheral aterial disease are some key medical terms that might most l;ifely indicate the type of heart disease one could have is, in fact, ischemia.

IHD is a broad term and accounts for the most prevalent type of heart disease in the USA.

However the new regs hopefully will define this disease better and hopefully veterans will not have problems proving they have this type of heart disease due to AO exposure.

Caused by cholesterol deposits, which block arteries, ischemic (is-KEY-mic) heart disease, also called coronary artery disease or coronary heart disease, is still the single biggest cause of death in the United States, killing nearly 500,000 Americans each year. But the situation is changing. According to a study in the Sept. 25, 1998, New England Journal of Medicine, deaths from coronary heart disease dropped 28 percent among men and 31 percent among women between 1987 and 1994 alone. This drop is primarily due to improved care.

An estimated 14 million people in the United States have ischemic heart disease. Of these, as many as 4 million have few or no symptoms and are unaware that they are at risk for angina (angina pectoris), heart attack (myocardial infarction), or sudden death.

Angina Pectoris

Plaque deposits on the interior linings of the heart’s arteries lie at the root of <a href="http://www.acc.org/media/patient/chd/glossary.htm#angina">angina pectoris. The narrowed arteries prevent the heart from getting enough oxygen during exercise and the person experiences a chest pain beneath the breast bone—this pain is called angina pectoris. Mild or intense, the discomfort usually lasts only a few minutes. Every year, an estimated 350,000 new cases of angina occur. Today, angina pectoris can be dramatically reduced or eliminated by medications, heart surgery, or balloon dilation of narrowed arteries.”

From:http://www.acc.org/media/patient/chd/ischemic.htm

“Silent Ischemia and Ischemic Heart Disease

What is ischemia?

Ischemia (is-KE'me-ah) is a condition in which the blood flow (and thus oxygen) is restricted to a part of the body. Cardiac ischemia is the name for lack of blood flow and oxygen to the heart muscle.

What is ischemic heart disease?

It's the term given to heart problems caused by narrowed heart arteries. When arteries are narrowed, less blood and oxygen reaches the heart muscle. This is also called coronary artery disease and coronary heart disease. This can ultimately lead to heart attack.

Ischemia often causes chest pain or discomfort known as angina pectoris (AN'jih-nah or an-JI'nah PEK'tor-is).

What is silent ischemia?

As many as 3 to 4 million Americans may have ischemic episodes without knowing it. These people have ischemia without pain — silent ischemia. They may have a heart attack with no prior warning. People with angina also may have undiagnosed episodes of silent ischemia. In addition, people who have had previous heart attacks or those with diabetes are especially at risk for developing silent ischemia.

Having an exercise stress test or wearing a Holter monitor – a battery-operated portable tape recording that measures and records your electrocardiogram (e-lek"tro-KAR'de-o-gram [ECG]) continuously, usually for 24-48 hours – are two tests often used to diagnose this problem. Other tests also may be used.

From:http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=4720

Ischemic cardiomyopathy results when the arteries that bring blood and oxygen to the heart are blocked. There may be a buildup of cholesterol and other substances, called plaque, in the arteries that bring oxygen to heart muscle tissue. Over time, the heart muscle does not work well, and it is more difficult for the heart to fill and release blood.

Ischemic cardiomyopathy is a common cause of congestive heart failure. Patients with this condition may at one time have had a heart attack, angina, or unstable angina. A few patients may not have noticed any previous symptoms.

Ischemic cardiomyopathy is the most common type of cardiomyopathy in the United States. It affects approximately 1 out of 100 people, most often middle-aged to elderly men.”

From:

http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000160.htm

also

Diabetic ischemic cardiomyopathy can cause a heart attack without a level of pain that would indicate heart attack. An EKG can immediately reveal whether this was silent ischemic heart attack or not.

Also severe peripheral neuropathy and arterial disease is another factor that can limit the amount of pain a heart attack victim can have.

None of this information is meant to alarm anyone.

But we and our significant others need to be aware of these things.

And AO vets filing for Ischemic heart disease might find this information helpful.

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Berta,

I have 4 stents put in, and also have HTN, do you think it will help me I was in the vietnam war, and I am having so many problems at my age of 58 just to get diagnosed with ptsd, have you ant ideas, I love reading your post, and I am rather new to this site for sur!!

Loma Linda Bill

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VA never SCs HBP as secondary to anything usless they have medical statements to that effect.They will use the word "essential" to describe HBP meaning they dont know the cause.But in many cases it is obviously due to a heart condition.

They also can suggest that if the HBP was diagnosed prior to SC heart condition, it is not secondary.

Medical evidence or a statement from a doctor can help gets the HBP service connected as secondary.

Is this still an open claim? For the HBP?

Berta HTN and heart disease was in my grandmother's side of the famly also cancer, and I went through chemo in las vegas at the va for hodgkins disease and could not finish the last 3 cycles due to the fact the meds made me sick, any sufgestions, I have 4 heart stents in as of today.

Thanks,

loma linda bill

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As long as your type of heart disease is ischemic in nature -you can claim it due to AO exposure.

Most heart disease is ischemic but this is something your medical records will clarify.

Hopefully when the VA puts this proposed rule into the Federal Register they will define what they conisder ischemic heart disease.

I think it will be rated same as atherosclerotic heart disease but cannot predict how VA will handle this new AO presumptive.

Both Hodgkins and Non Hodgkins are AO presumptive disabilities-have you cl;aimed them?

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As long as your type of heart disease is ischemic in nature -you can claim it due to AO exposure.

Most heart disease is ischemic but this is something your medical records will clarify.

Hopefully when the VA puts this proposed rule into the Federal Register they will define what they conisder ischemic heart disease.

I think it will be rated same as atherosclerotic heart disease but cannot predict how VA will handle this new AO presumptive.

Both Hodgkins and Non Hodgkins are AO presumptive disabilities-have you cl;aimed them?

I can't say for sure but this opens a lot of things up. What about people that have multiple types of this heart disease and the effect each one has on the other. Each disease may be benign in of itself but in combination can be deadly. This is a toughy and I can only see the backlog of cases go much higher.

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I can't say for sure but this opens a lot of things up. What about people that have multiple types of this heart disease and the effect each one has on the other. Each disease may be benign in of itself but in combination can be deadly. This is a toughy and I can only see the backlog of cases go much higher.

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I have AO exposure and a presuptive IHD , have had three different ICD's implanted and just had a

eckocardiogram that as the VA studied was " poor result " then a Muga last week at the VA and the report back gave me a EF of 46... shich I think is better than my civilian Doccs said it was a mid 30's five years ago.

I suspect the VA will stall, and or narrow the application of the IHD presumptives claim, many will not be included....

I have filed the total claim with my VSO and await the results.

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