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<title>My American Doctor &#45; : Heart Disease</title>
<link>https://myamericandoctor.in/rss/category/Heart-Disease</link>
<description>My American Doctor &#45; : Heart Disease</description>
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<dc:rights>@myamericandoctor.in</dc:rights>

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<title>When Your Heart Gives Up and Nobody Knows Why: The Terrifying Reality of Unexplained Heart Failure</title>
<link>https://myamericandoctor.in/Unexplained-Heart-Failure</link>
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<description><![CDATA[ Unexplained heart failure strikes without warning—your heart suddenly can&#039;t pump blood effectively, but doctors can&#039;t find the cause. No blocked arteries. No obvious disease. Just a failing heart and mounting fear. This comprehensive guide reveals why 30-40% of heart failure cases remain unexplained, the hidden conditions doctors often miss, and the advanced tests that could save your life. Learn the warning signs, when to demand better answers, and how to navigate the medical system when standard tests show nothing but your symptoms tell a different story. ]]></description>
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<pubDate>Sun, 01 Feb 2026 20:10:57 +0530</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Dr. Manu Kaushik</dc:creator>
<media:keywords>Unexplained heart failure, idiopathic cardiomyopathy, heart failure without known cause, dilated cardiomyopathy unexplained, Cardiac MRI for heart failure, genetic testing for cardiomyopathy, viral myocarditis symptoms, infiltrative cardiomyopathy, heart failure specialist India, advanced cardiac diagnostic testing, peripartum cardiomyopathy delayed diagnosis, stress-induced cardiomyopathy, Takotsubo syndrome, heart failure causes missed, amyloidosis heart failure, sarcoidosis cardiac involvement</media:keywords>
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<title>Cardiac Amyloidosis &#45; The Silent Protein Invasion: Why Your &amp;quot;Normal&amp;quot; Heart Tests Might Be Missing a Deadly Disease</title>
<link>https://myamericandoctor.in/Cardiac-Amyloidosis</link>
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<description><![CDATA[ Cardiac amyloidosis is a progressive, often misdiagnosed heart condition where abnormal proteins accumulate in the heart muscle, causing heart failure and potentially fatal complications. Despite affecting 13-17% of heart failure patients, it remains undetected because standard cardiac tests miss it. This comprehensive guide reveals the warning signs doctors often overlook—from unexplained heart failure with preserved ejection fraction to the surprising connection with carpal tunnel syndrome. Learn about the life-saving cardiac amyloid scan (Tc99m-PYP), understand the difference between ATTR and AL types, discover new treatments like tafamidis and acoramidis that can add years to your life, and find out if you need testing before it&#039;s too late. ]]></description>
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<pubDate>Fri, 30 Jan 2026 01:09:15 +0530</pubDate>
<dc:creator>My American Doctor</dc:creator>
<media:keywords>cardiac amyloidosis, cardiac amyloid scan, heart failure preserved ejection fraction, ATTR amyloidosis, amyloidosis symptoms, cardiac amyloidosis diagnosis, tafamidis treatment, Tc99m PYP scan, unexplained heart failure, thickened heart walls causes, restrictive cardiomyopathy, cardiac amyloidosis treatment, AL amyloidosis, transthyretin amyloidosis, heart failure carpal tunnel, diastolic heart failure, amyloid heart disease, HFpEF causes, what is cardiac amyloidosis, cardiac amyloidosis vs hear</media:keywords>
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