steppinthrax
Diamond Member
- Jul 17, 2006
- 3,990
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No two heart attacks are the same. As mentioned in this thread, there are conditions that pre-empt a heart attack or act like one without damaging any heart tissue. As for your grandfather dying in his chair, his heart could have given out very quickly.
I'm always interested in how doctors are able to determine the cause of death when someone dies of cancer or something to that effect when in most cases, the only thing that specifically links to the person dying is their heart stopping. Like my grandfather had leukemia yet his death certificate says he died of a heart attack. I mean if your liver fails, eventually toxins build up in the blood and the last thing that happens before the person dies, the heart stops. So how do they come up with the cause of death then? It feels very subjective the way they determine it.
Well when they do a autopsy they take organs out and analyze them.
It's pretty easy to look at a heart and see the color and size of the heart and how much it weights etc... I'm fairly certain they saw black areas in the heart where heart tissue just died.