Although the correlation between alcohol intake and heart disease has been known for a century, the information tends to be dominated by historical and anecdotal reports. The more recent literature shows that alcoholic damage leads to metabolic and structural changes in all tissues of the heart, with the result that the contractile element, coronary vessel or specific conduction tissue may fail. The resultant symptoms are heart failure, angina pectoris and arrhythmias. These correlations are discussed
Alcoholic liver disease is the most prevalent cause of progressive liver disease in Europe. Alcoholi...
The harmful effects of excessive alcohol consumption on the liver have long been recognized. A corre...
The association between alcohol consumption and abnormalities of heart rate and rhythm has long been...
Chronic and heavy alcohol consumption has deleterious effects upon the car-diovascular system and ma...
This chapter describes the pathogenesis of alcoholic heart muscle disease as a problem of cumulative...
More than 60 prospective cohort studies have shown a consistent association between regular and mode...
Alcohol is a commonly used drug worldwide. Epidemiological studies have identified alcohol consumpti...
Several studies have indicated that moderate drinkers have a lower risk of both nonfatal myocardial ...
1Excessive alcohol consumption is associated with alco-holic cardiomyopathy, characterized by enlarg...
Alcoholic patients who consume >90 g of alcohol a day for >5 years are at risk of developing asympto...
Objectives. The alterations of structure and function of the heart are intermediate phenotypes in th...
Recent studies have shown that there exists an inverse relationship between coronary heart disease(C...
Alcohol use is an important preventable and modifiable cause of non-communicable disease, and has co...
Excessive alcohol consumption represents one of the main causes of non-ischemic dilated cardiomyopat...
Excessive alcohol consumption represents one of the main causes of non-ischemic dilated cardiomyopat...
Alcoholic liver disease is the most prevalent cause of progressive liver disease in Europe. Alcoholi...
The harmful effects of excessive alcohol consumption on the liver have long been recognized. A corre...
The association between alcohol consumption and abnormalities of heart rate and rhythm has long been...
Chronic and heavy alcohol consumption has deleterious effects upon the car-diovascular system and ma...
This chapter describes the pathogenesis of alcoholic heart muscle disease as a problem of cumulative...
More than 60 prospective cohort studies have shown a consistent association between regular and mode...
Alcohol is a commonly used drug worldwide. Epidemiological studies have identified alcohol consumpti...
Several studies have indicated that moderate drinkers have a lower risk of both nonfatal myocardial ...
1Excessive alcohol consumption is associated with alco-holic cardiomyopathy, characterized by enlarg...
Alcoholic patients who consume >90 g of alcohol a day for >5 years are at risk of developing asympto...
Objectives. The alterations of structure and function of the heart are intermediate phenotypes in th...
Recent studies have shown that there exists an inverse relationship between coronary heart disease(C...
Alcohol use is an important preventable and modifiable cause of non-communicable disease, and has co...
Excessive alcohol consumption represents one of the main causes of non-ischemic dilated cardiomyopat...
Excessive alcohol consumption represents one of the main causes of non-ischemic dilated cardiomyopat...
Alcoholic liver disease is the most prevalent cause of progressive liver disease in Europe. Alcoholi...
The harmful effects of excessive alcohol consumption on the liver have long been recognized. A corre...
The association between alcohol consumption and abnormalities of heart rate and rhythm has long been...