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Cardiology procedures we've done the work for
Every procedure ships with prep instructions, what-to-expect guidance, aftercare, and the questions patients actually ask — written by physicians, approved by yours before going live.
Diagnostic cardiac catheterization / angiogramCatheter ablation (AFib)PCI / coronary stentPacemakerTAVR (aortic valve replacement)ICD (defibrillator)CardioversionCoronary artery fistulaCoronary artery spasmHerpanginaLudwigs anginaMitral stenosisMitral valve regurgitationPeripartum cardiomyopathyThoracic aortic aneurysmUnstable angina+73 more
Real questions. Physician-approved answers.
A sample from our cardiology answer library. Your practice reviews and approves every answer — and can customize any of them to your protocols — before a single patient sees it.
How to prevent Coronary Heart Disease?
Coronary heart disease prevention often centers on overall heart-healthy living. Commonly discussed habits include not smoking, eating a balanced diet, staying physically active, keeping a healthy weight, and managing stress. Working with a provider to keep blood pressure, blood sugar, and cholesterol in a healthy range is also part of the picture. A doctor can help tailor these general ideas to fit one person's situation.
Coronary Heart Disease
How to prevent Heart Attack?
Lowering heart attack risk is closely tied to caring for the heart and blood vessels over time. People often hear about not smoking, staying active, eating nutritious foods, and keeping blood pressure, cholesterol, and blood sugar in healthy ranges. Managing stress and following a provider's guidance for any ongoing conditions can matter too. A healthcare provider can help shape a plan that fits an individual's needs.
Heart Attack
What is Coronary Heart Disease Risk Factors?
Coronary heart disease risk factors are things that can raise the chance of developing narrowed or blocked heart arteries. Some, like age and family history, can't be changed. Others that often come up include high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, smoking, being inactive, carrying extra weight, and ongoing stress. A healthcare provider can help explain which factors may matter most for a given person.
Coronary Heart Disease Risk Factors
How to prevent Heart Valve Disease?
While not every valve problem can be prevented, supporting overall heart health may help. General habits that are often discussed include not smoking, staying active, eating nutritious foods, and managing conditions like high blood pressure. Caring for the teeth and gums and treating infections promptly are sometimes mentioned too. A healthcare provider can share which steps fit a person's own health needs.
Heart Valve Disease
Do you have information about Mitral valve surgery - minimally invasive
Minimally invasive mitral valve surgery is an approach to repair or replace the heart's mitral valve through smaller openings rather than a large chest incision. In general, it is one of several ways such procedures can be done, and whether it fits depends on a person's anatomy and overall health. Your care team and surgeon are the best sources for explaining what is involved and what to expect.
Mitral Valve Surgery - Minimally Invasive
Do you have information about Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery
Coronary artery bypass surgery is a procedure that creates a new path for blood to flow around a narrowed or blocked heart artery, using a blood vessel from another part of the body. It's one option sometimes considered for serious coronary artery disease. Whether it's appropriate depends on many personal factors, so a person's doctor is the best source for understanding the details and options.
Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery
Examples from PrepQ's physician-reviewed library. Practices customize answers to their own protocols during onboarding.
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