CAN YOU DIE FROM A BROKEN HEART?

Sometimes, life hits you where it hurts and you are so sad, it feels like the world is ending. Well cheer up, because it could be the end of you! Although rare, it can, and has happened. Here we’re going to see how exactly you can die from a broken heart.

Can You Die From This?

Only in extremely rare cases can you actually die from this, although it is possible. In extreme situations, the body can go into cardiogenic shock, which is when the heart is weakened so much that it can’t pump enough blood that the body needs. This particular reaction can be fatal if it isn’t treated immediately. Other complications can be a backup of fluid in your lungs, low blood pressure, an irregular heartbeat, or heart failure. Death is rare, but heart failure occurs in about 20% of patients with broken-heart syndrome.

Treatment & Recovery

Most cases of broken-heart syndrome have happy endings. Patients typically will make a full recovery within a few weeks, or at most, two months. Doctors will treat this with diuretics which improve heart muscle contractions, beta blockers, or other medications that block the damaging effects of stress hormones on the heart.

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Symptoms of Broken-Heart Syndrome

When you have broken-heart syndrome, part of your heart temporarily enlarges and doesn’t pump as well. The rest of your heart will either maintain its functionality, or have even more forceful contractions. Due to similarities, broken-heart syndrome could be misdiagnosed as a heart attack. Symptoms and test results are similar; however there are no blocked arteries in broken-heart syndrome. Someone with broken-heart syndrome will experience a sudden pain in their chest and shortness of breath. It can lead to severe, short-term heart muscle failure, but overall it is treatable. Those who suffer from this can expect to recover in full just within a few weeks, and once you have it, your risks of experiencing broken-heart syndrome again are even lower.

Official Diagnosis & Causes

There are a few names for this condition: Broken Heart Syndrome, stress-induced cardiomyopathy, or takotsubo cardiomyopathy. Tako tsubo are octopus traps that look like the pot-shape of the broken heart. In general, women are at a higher risk of experiencing broken heart syndrome. Even more so, post-menopausal women are the largest group who can be affected by takotsubo. In fact, over 90% of reported cases are in women between the ages of 58 and 75.

Have you ever experienced a sever heart break?

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