

It has been observed that people suffering from diabetes tend to have 50% increased heart risks like getting heart diseases or strokes. If you are a diabetic - middle aged person, you may have heart attack earlier than those who are heart patients, more aged than you. Heart complications are "micro vascular disease and "macro vascular disease". The damage to small blood vessels leads to a microangiopathy.
Coronary artery disease (CAD) is the most common form of heart disease in diabetes. In such a condition, the arteries that supply blood to the heart get narrowed or obstructed due to fatty clots. Plaque is formed out of cholesterol, calcium, and other substances that float in blood and inside the walls of coronary arteries and other arteries. When these small vessels are blocked and start narrowing, it is named as atherosclerosis.
A heart attack results when blood flow is completely blocked, usually by a blood clot forming over a plaque that has busted and opened (ruptured).
Heart attack (myocardial infection) causes complete death of the heart muscle cells.
The pain of heart attack is usually combined with other signs such as
Chest discomfort - it feels like heavy load on the heart, or crushing or squeezing
Chest pain radiating to jaws, neck, shoulders, or arms
Sweating
Nausea and vomiting
Shortness of breath
Dizziness with mild to severe headache.
Irregular and fast heartbeats
Loss of consciousness
People with Type 2 diabetes often have low HDL cholesterol and raised triglyceride levels, which together increases the risk of atherosclerosis. High blood pressure, smoking, obesity and physical inactivity are also risk factors for CVD. High blood sugar causes changes in the hormones and the cells that can damage your blood vessels or nerves, or both. Damaged blood vessels are more likely to build up plaque, increasing the risk of coronary artery disease, heart attack and stroke. Damage to smaller blood vessels can lead to loss of vision, kidney disease, and nerve problems
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