The treatment for microvascular disease involves nitroglycerin, calcium channel blockers, beta blockers, ACE inhibitors, and statins.
Other treatments for microvascular disease involve diet, exercise, no smoking and weight control as well as stress relief.
The medications and diet and lifestyle changes can help improve blood flow and manage any underlying conditions like high blood pressure and diabetes, and cardiac rehab is often recommended for treatment of microvascular disease in severe cases.
Statins will lower your cholesterol and improve blood vessel function, calcium channel blockers relax artery muscles and increase blood flow, beta blockers slow heart rate and reduce blood pressure, nitrates like nitroglycerin ease chest pain by relaxing coronary arteries, ACE inhibitors help to widen your blood vessels and lower your blood pressure.
Aspirin can also help prevent blood clots and inflammation and even a medication called Ranexa also known as Ranolazine may be used for relief of chest pain.
Microvascular disease becomes most common in adults over age 60 and almost everyone over the age of 90 has some degree of microvascular disease.
Chronic kidney disease, smoking, high cholesterol, diabetes and high blood pressure also known as hypertension are all risk factors for microvascular disease.
The way you get microvascular disease is from damage from conditions like diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol and even from smoking, metabolic issues, vascular strain, lifestyle factors, hormonal changes and inflammation from conditions like lupus or systemic inflammation.
Diabetes and high blood sugar and high cholesterol can damage your blood vessel linings which results in endothelium and in turn leads to microvascular disease.
Chronic high blood pressure also weakens and stiffens blood vessel walls, leading to vascular strain and smoking accelerates damage to blood vessels and obesity, poor diet and inactivity can worsen your cardiovascular health.
And lower estrogen levels, which is common after menopause also increase risk of microvascular disease in women.
With endothelial dysfunction, the inner lining of your blood vessels become damaged and with impaired dilation, tiny vessels cannot open properly to supply oxygen during stress or exercise and with spasms and stiffness, the blood vessels become stiff or go into spasms, obstructing blood flow.
Microvascular disease is a condition that results in damage or dysfunction of the body's smallest blood vessels (capillaries, arterioles, venules), which also often leads to reduced blood flow and oxygen to vital organs like the heart, brain, and kidneys, causing symptoms such as chest pain (in the heart), cognitive issues (in the brain), or kidney problems, and is also linked to risk factors like diabetes, hypertension, smoking, and aging, with women being disproportionately affected, particularly in the heart.
Microvascular disease affects the brain's tiny blood vessels, which reduce blood flow and damages brain tissue, often silently until major symptoms appear.
Microvascular disease is a major contributor to lacunar strokes which are small, deep brain infarcts and increases the likelihood of overall stroke and it's the primary cause of cognitive impairment and vascular dementia, which affects memory and thinking and microvascular disease also damages motor pathways, which lead to walking difficulties, balance problems and parkinsonism and it can also cause depression, apathy and personality changes.
The symptoms of chronic microvascular disease in the brain are cognitive changes such as memory problems, mobility problems like falling or difficulty walking, mood shifts such as irritability or depression and stroke like symptoms such as slurred speech, vision problems, weakness and numbness.
The symptoms of chronic microvascular disease in the brain can vary depending on the location and the severity of the damage to the small blood vessels in the brain.
Problems with thinking, walking and mood are common symptoms of chronic microvascular disease in the brain.
The kind of doctor that treats small vessel disease is a vascular surgeon, vascular specialist, cardiologist and even a neurologist.
A neurologist is a doctor that specializes in disorders of the nervous system, including small vessel disease in the brain.
A vascular surgeon is a surgeon that can perform surgery to treat small vessel disease, like stenting or angioplasty.
A cardiologist is a doctor that specializes in heart and blood vessel conditions, including microvascular disease, "small vessel disease in the heart".
And a vascular specialist is a doctor that specializes in disorders of the blood vessels, including small vessels.
Small vessel disease is also known as microvascular disease as well as microangiopathy.
And depending on the organ affected by microvascular disease, it can also be called coronary microvascular disease or even microvascular dysfunction or cerebral small vessel disease.
Small vessel disease is what highlights the problem is affecting the smaller arteries, unlike traditional heart disease that also affects larger vessels.
Microangiopathy is a general medical term for a disease of small blood and coronary microvascular disease specifies that the small vessels in your heart are affected.
Cerebral small vessel disease is used when your small vessels in your brain are affected and microvascular dysfunction is what refers to the poor function of the small vessels.
Microvascular disease is progressive and chronic which can get worse over time, especially if any of the underlying conditions and risk factors are not managed or treated.
Microvascular disease affects your body's small blood vessels and potentially can result in tissue damage and even organ failure, which can also manifest as conditions such as increased stroke risk, heart failure and cognitive decline.
Early changes with microvascular disease can sometimes be reversible, but as microvascular disease progresses it can result in structural changes and health issues that can be irreversible and sometimes microvascular disease can progress silently.
Exercise can help microvascular disease as exercise helps to improve microvascular function by promoting blood flow and delivering the needed oxygen and nutrients as well as removing waste products and regulating inflammation as well as oxidative stress.
Physical activity and regular exercise helps counteract microvascular remodeling and also counteract the development of small vessel disease, which improves the structure and function of the tiny blood vessels.
Exercise can also initially cause the symptoms like chest pain in some people, but exercise is still crucial in managing microvascular disease and preventing further damage from microvascular disease.
Microvascular disease can feel like a heavy, tight or squeezing chest pain called angina, which can last a long time even when resting.
Microvascular disease can also cause shortness of breath, nausea, dizziness and unexplained fatigue.
The pain with microvascular disease can also radiate to your arms, your jaw, neck or back.
And symptoms of microvascular disease can be frustrating as they are not often caused by blockages in the large arteries, which make the standard tests ineffective.
A microvascular disease is a condition which affects your small blood vessels throughout your body.
The small blood vessels that microvascular disease affects are called microvasculature.
The microvasculature small blood vessels are crucial for delivering the needed oxygen and nutrients to the tissues and for also removing waste products.