Coronary Artery Disease
$47.00
Description
Are you or someone you love suffering from Coronary artery disease and associated symptoms? At Universal Sound Therapy we deal with all sorts of issues including coronary artery disease with our sound therapies.
How?
Our therapy is based on frequencies, tuning your body to vibrate at the correct frequency is as important to your body healing itself or reducing symptoms you are facing. Our healing sessions provide your body with the frequencies that would be found in a normal, healthy body. Your system absorbs these frequencies and makes the needed changes to “tune itself” and start to heal. Our bodies want to be healthy and when we provide them with the proper tools they will do everything needed to do just that.
Universal Sound Therapy is in the business to help your body heal and we are so confident that it will work for you that we offer you a 90-day money back guarantee. And if our coronary artery disease sound therapy doesn’t help, just return it for a full refund. Try to get that from your doctor or pharmacy.
Our Coronary artery disease sound therapy helps by:
- Decrease and minimize occurrence of palpitations, weakness, and shortness of breath
- Has the correct frequencies to help your body retune itself
- Aligns and opens your Chakra system
- Opens and cleans up your meridians
- Helps your body heal itself
Short Description of Coronary Artery Disease
Coronary artery disease develops when the major blood vessels of the body that supply the heart are diseased or have become damaged due to cholesterol deposits or plaques. This accumulation of fats in the blood vessels along with inflammation are the ones that lead to the diseases associated with this condition.
Symptoms of Coronary Artery Disease
The most common is angina or chest pain which can be described as tightness, pressure, aching, burning, numbness, fullness or squeezing chest discomfort. It is primarily felt in the chest but can also appear on the back, neck, shoulders, arms and jaw. Other associated symptoms are:
- Shortness of breath
- Heart palpitations: irregular heartbeats, skipped beats or a “flip-flop” feeling in your chest
- A faster-than-normal heartbeat
- Dizziness
- Nausea
- Extreme weakness
- Sweating
About Coronary Artery Disease
The coronary arteries are the main blood vessels that supply the heart. Coronary artery disease refers to the narrowing or blockage of the major coronary arteries. The disease is known as atherosclerosis and is defined as the accumulation of cholesterol and fatty deposits known as arterial plaques on the walls of the arteries of the heart. The plaques clog and damage the coronary arteries resulting to limitation or complete stoppage of blood flow going to the heart. When the heart is unable to get proper oxygenated blood and nutrients it will cause angina or chest pain and even a heart attack. Angina is typically triggered by emotional or physical stress. The pain felt by patients usually goes away within minutes after cessation of the stressful activity. In women, the pain may be sharp or brief and may also be felt on the neck, left arm and back. The patient will also experience shortness of breath when the heart cannot pump enough blood to meet the body’s requirements. When an artery becomes completely blocked it will result in a heart attack. The signs and symptoms of a classical heart attack in patients are crushing pressure on the chest as well as pain felt on the left arm and shoulder accompanied by cold sweats, shortness of breath, fatigue and nausea. It may also happen without any apparent signs and symptoms.
When to call 911
If you believe you are having a heart attack, immediately dial 911 or your local emergency contact number. If you do not have access to emergency medical services, have someone drive you to the nearest hospital. Driving yourself should only be the last option. If you have risk factors for coronary artery disease such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, cigarette smoking, obesity and strong family history, have yourself tested especially if you are already showing signs and symptoms.
Etiology of Coronary Artery Disease
Coronary artery disease is known to begin with damage or injury to the inner layer of the coronary artery and may at times begin as early as childhood. The damage is caused by different factors such as:
- Tobacco use
- Hypertension
- High cholesterol
- Diabetes or insulin resistance
- Sedentary lifestyle.
Once there is damage to the inner wall of the artery, the plaque that is composed of cholesterol and other cellular waste products begin to collect at the site of the injury. This is known as atherosclerosis. When the fatty plaque surface breaks or ruptures, blood cells known as platelets begin clumping together at the site in an attempt to repair the injury. The clump can block the artery which leads to the heart attack seen in patients.
Risk Factors
- Age – Getting older increases the risk of developing damaged or narrowed arteries.
- Sex – Men are in general more at higher risk for the development of CAD but the risk for women increases upon menopause.
- Family history – Patients with a strong medical family history of the disease are more predisposed to developing the condition, especially if there is a close relative that developed it at an early age. The risk is much higher if a father or brother was diagnosed with heart disease prior to age 55 or if a mother or sister developed CAD after age 65.
- High Blood Pressure – Uncontrolled high blood pressure can result to hardening and thickening of the arteries and narrows the channels through which the blood flow.
- High Cholesterol Levels – Patients with high levels of cholesterol particularly the LDL type or low density lipoprotein also known as “bad cholesterol” and a low density of HDL or high density lipoprotein or “good cholesterol.”
- Diabetes – Patients with diabetes mellitus are known to increase the risk of developing CAD and shares similar risk factors like obesity and hypertension.
- Obesity – Excess weight usually worsens the other risk factors.
- Sedentary Lifestyle – Lack of exercise along with other risk factors are known to cause the disease.
- High Stress Levels – Unrelieved stress in a person’s life may result to damage to the arteries and worsen other risk factors for the disease.
- Poor or Unhealthy Food Choices – Eating too much food with high amounts of saturated fat, trans fat, salt and sugar increases the risk of developing CAD.
The risk factors can occur together and one may trigger another. For instance, obesity can lead to type 2 diabetes and hypertension. If grouped together, certain risk factors can increase the risk of developing CAD. A good example is metabolic syndrome – a cluster of conditions that include high cholesterol, high blood pressure, high blood sugar and excess body fat around the waste.
Coronary Artery Disease and Sound Therapy
Coronary artery disease is one of the conditions that can be treated with sound therapy. Everything around us has a vibrational frequency and these frequencies can impact our health, emotions and well-being. Sound therapy is an alternative therapy treatment method that uses frequencies to bring the body back into a healthy state of balance and harmony, Sound therapy is one of the most powerful alternative treatment modalities that can help the body back to complete health. The healing occurs at the cellular level by opening up the flow of energy to move us back to the correct alignment with optimum health. Sound therapy can assist in shifting our energy frequency from lower to higher, removing the lower frequencies of emotions such as fear, anger, stress to achieve a sense of harmony and peace. Quantum physics has determined that everything around us has a vibration, be it an object or a person. When there is a sound there is also a vibration. When sound is used as a treatment modality it is meant to raise the body’s vibrational frequency in order to remove the negative energy that causes disease.
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