Premature complexes can be indicative of an increased cardiac risk or can contribute to the initiation or deterioration of heart failure in particular in the presence of organic heart disease. Most premature complexes are benign. The postextrasystolic pause or the augmented postextrasystolic premature beat may cause the following symptoms: feeling of a skipped beat or the sensation of a pounding heart beat causing the feeling "that something is seriously wrong".
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNot only can cardiac diseases have neurological sequelae, but neurological diseases can also affect the heart. In this paper, the effects of a primary neurological disease on the heart are reviewed. Rare genetic muscular disorders, systemic neurodegenerative diseases, special neurological syndromes and sequelae of brain disease are discussed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Psychosocial factors in cardiovascular diseases are increasingly acknowledged by patients, health care providers and payer organizations. Due to the rapidly increasing body of evidence, the German Cardiac Society has commissioned an update of its 2013 position paper on this topic. The German version was published in 2018 and the current manuscript is an extended translation of the original version.
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