For decades, surviving a heart attack has come with a lifelong prescription: Stay on medications called beta-blockers to help protect your heart. But doctors are taking a closer look at whether ...
Among stable, relatively low-risk patients who had previously suffered a heart attack, discontinuing beta-blockers after at ...
In stabilized heart attack survivors without heart failure or left ventricular (LV) systolic dysfunction, stopping the ...
For decades, beta-blockers have been commonly prescribed as a standard treatment for adults who have had heart attacks with ...
The results run counter to ABYSS but align with other data showing beta-blockers shouldn’t continue indefinitely after MI.
The role of long-term beta-blocker therapy after a myocardial infarction in patients without left ventricular systolic dysfunction or heart failure is unclear in the era of contemporary ...
A new class of beta blockers designed to activate only when struck by specific wavelengths of light could allow doctors to ...
Credit: Getty Images A discussion of the use of beta-blocker therapy following AMI, with Christopher Granger, MD, Gregg Fonarow, MD, and Carlin S Long, MD. Beta blockers have long been included in the ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Illustration: Cat O'Neil/The Guardian (Illustration: Cat O'Neil/The Guardian) I first took beta blockers two years ago, when I was ...
Imagine you're about to give a presentation to a room full of people.
In stable patients without heart failure, discontinuing beta-blockers 1 year after a heart attack was noninferior to continued use for all-cause death, recurrent MI or HF hospitalization, researchers ...