▲ | JumpCrisscross 3 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
> bacteria in arterial plaques can cause them to break up and cause the attack “Dormant bacteria within the biofilm remain[ing] shielded from both the patient’s immune system and antibiotics because they cannot penetrate the biofilm matrix” whose rupture “result[s] in thrombus formation and ultimately myocardial infarction” sounds like infection more than careless bacteria kicking up muck. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | Supermancho 2 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Not all infarctions are due to infectious disease. The title (even on HN) is incorrect. "Some myocardial infarctions attributed to an infectious disease." "A myocardial infarction may be due to infectious disease." My maternal grandfather died of an aortic separation. This caused a myocradial infarction, which was not due to infectious disease. I had my aortic valve replaced with a mechanical when I was 2, and 9, and 31, so I'll have a more nuanced kind of heart failure. | |||||||||||||||||
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