IMPORTANT UPDATE
If you are having trouble with our mobile app, you must remove and reinstall the app on your device.
Updating the app alone will not fix the issue. Your login will not be impacted. We sincerely apologize for this inconvenience.
Our Minot location is now open!
Market Pharmacy is now G&G Pharmacy, conveniently located in Marketplace Foods on the corner of Hwy 2 & Broadway!
Same great staff and same great care!
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Results for search "Angioplasty".

Health News Results - 5

Folks undergoing cardiac catheterization procedures to diagnose heart problems may be able to safely skip the traditional pre-op fasting that's now the norm, new research shows.

"Just as our techniques and technology for cardiac catheterization have evolved, so should our approach to pre-procedure m...

Patients who undergo angioplasty and stenting to open clogged arteries in and around the heart should also be screened for depression, according to a new study.

Researchers found that depressed patients were less likely than their mentally healthy peers to take their prescribed medications, including beta-blockers, antiplatelets and statins.

These medications reduce the likelihood...

Black adults who undergo a common procedure to open up clogged arteries are readmitted to the hospital more often than their white peers. They're also more likely to die in the years after treatment, a new study finds.

Researchers looked at how patients fared following balloon angioplasty and coronary stenting -- "one of the most common cardiovascular procedures performed in the U.S....

A person with advanced heart failure may often need a heart transplant or a mechanical heart pump to survive.

But white patients are twice as likely as Black patients to get this critically important care, a new study finds, and racial bias may be the reason why.

Folks who've had a clogged artery reopened probably can stop taking blood thinners sooner than previously thought, a new study argues.

Patients are regularly prescribed blood thinners for a year or more after angioplasty. This is to make sure that blood doesn't clot inside the metal stent that now holds their artery open. That could cause a heart attack or stroke.

But heart doctors ...