Acid Versus Alkaline
Q: I look forward to reading your articles. Recently, I read that it is better for the heart and other organs to have an alkaline, rather than an acid system. How does one achieve an alkaline system?
A: I am not aware of the information you cite. In fact, the body tightly regulates its pH (a measure of the acid-base balance) between 7.35 and 7.45. For example, if your blood becomes too acidic, a condition called metabolic acidosis, the body compensates by breathing more rapidly to exhale carbon dioxide and return the pH to normal limits. I am also not aware of a way to achieve an alkaline system that the body will not attempt to rebalance to normal. Nor am I aware that such an alkaline system would be better for the body’s organs.
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Heartbeat
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Please explain the difference between an electrocardiogram and an echocardiogram. What exactly do these tests tell doctors about the heart?
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My brother-in-law just turned 50 and needs a new heart. We sometimes hear that wealthy people get donor organs quicker than others. Is this true? How long is the usual wait for a new heart?
Low-Dose Aspirin for Heart Health
What is the latest information about taking daily baby aspirin to help the heart?
Heart Defect Often Causes No Symptoms
I had a stroke in 2003, and a diagnostic test showed a “hole” in my heart with no right-to-left shunt. The shunt didn’t show up on a different kind of test in 2009, either.
I came through the stroke fine because I went to the hospital right away and have been on warfarin ever since. My question is: If there’s no shunt, is the hole present?
Surgery Corrects Heart Rhythm
Q: How does the Maze treatment for atrial fibrillation work, and what does it involve? A: The Maze procedure is open heart surgery to eliminate rapid heartbeats. It involves making a series of incisions in the top portion of the heart, the atria. In experienced hands, the procedure is successful in more than 90 percent [...]










