hay fever
shunt
A shunt is an abnormal communication between chambers or blood vessels.
hayfever
Hay fever can make you miserable and affect your performance at work or school and interfere with leisure activities. But you don't have to put up with annoying symptoms. Learning how to avoid triggers and finding the right treatment can make a big difference
hay fever
Hay fever, also called allergic rhinitis, causes cold-like signs and symptoms, such as a runny nose, itchy eyes, congestion, sneezing and sinus pressure. But unlike a cold, hay fever isn't caused by a virus. Hay fever is caused by an allergic response to outdoor or indoor allergens, such as pollen, dust mites or pet dander. Hay fever can make you miserable and affect your performance at work or school and interfere with leisure activities. But you don't have to put up with annoying symptoms. Learning how to avoid triggers and finding the right treatment can make a big difference
right-to-left shunt
a dusky blueness of the skin (cyanosis) results because the pulmonary circulation is bypassed and poorly oxygenated blood enters the systemic circulation.
acute coronary syndrome
applied to any of the three catastrophic manifestations of IHD—unstable angina, acute MI, and SCD.
Subendocardial infarctions
are MIs limited to the inner third of the myocardium; these infarcts typically do not exhibit ST segment elevations or Q waves on the ECG tracing.
preductal coarctation
characterized by circumferential narrowing of the aortic segment between the left subclavian artery and the ductus arteriosus
stable angina
occurring predictably at certain levels of exertion
unstable angina
occurring with progressively less exertion or even at rest
Transmural infarctions
the full thickness of the ventricle and are caused by epicardial vessel occlusion through a combination of chronic atherosclerosis and acute thrombosis
Eisenmenger
unoxygenated blood into the systemic circulation
Prinzmetal angina
vessel spasm