Thursday, August 14, 2008

TriUnity New Clear Heart Conference Call Tonight!!

Good Afternoon All TriUnity Team Members

Read this story - then be on the call tonight and Bring your team and everyone you can.

Our new product "Clear Heart" will be our main topic...Reminder to join us on Tonight's Overview & Training Calls.

JOIN US ON OUR LIVE BUSINESS OVERVIEW CALL TONIGHT -Thursday Night August 14, 2008

TriUnity Live Opportunity Calls
Every Monday, Tuesday Wednesday, and Thursday 6PM Pacific Time - 9PM Eastern Time 1-507-726-3420 enter code 21265#

JOIN US ON OUR LIVE TRAINING CALL TONIGHT - Thursday Night August 14, 2008 6:30 PM Pacific Time - 9:30 PM Eastern Time
Dial 1-507-726-3420 enter code 21265#

A Healthy Heart - Your Life Depends On It...Heart Attacks and Women - Ladies, my intention is to scare you.

I hope I succeed. Gary H.

Facts:

1) Heart disease and heart attacks are the #1 killers of women in America!

2) Over 500,000 women in the US die each year from cardiovascular disease.

3) It claims more lives than breast cancer, diabetes and accidents combined.

4) Women are half as likely to survive their first heart attack.

5) The symptoms of heart attack in women are often different than in men -- making it more difficult to diagnose and therefore treat.

6) You can have a heart attack and not even know it. About 35% of all heart attacks in women go unnoticed and unreported.

"Typical" symptoms of a heart attack in both men and women include:

1) Chest pain that can spread through the upper body to the arms, neck, shoulders or jaw.

2) Pressure in the chest, often described as, "an elephant sitting on it." Either constant or intermittent.

3) Shortness of breath or shallow breathing.

4) Weak and/or fast pulse.

5) Faintness or dizziness.

6) Sweating, heavy and often cold.

7) Nausea or upset stomach.

"Atypical" symptoms experienced more often by women:

1) A feeling of severe heartburn.
2) Breast pain.
3) Pain in the upper back or jaw with no chest pain.

Sometimes, doctors fail to recognize heart disease in women.

This is a "true-story" from a good friend, Dan this is "his" mom!

Case in point -- Dan's mother. In July she started feeling ill -- shortness of breath and general malaise. She went to the doctor who diagnosed bronchitis. He gave her a prescription for an antibiotic and sent her home. Several weeks later after not feeling better she returned to the doctor who took a chest x-ray and diagnosed pneumonia. He gave her another prescription and sent her home. Several weeks later she is feeling worse. She returns to the doctor. She tells him that she is 72 years old and she has never felt worse in her life. He tells her to "stop over-dramatizing." He takes another chest x-ray and advises her that her heart looks a little enlarged and there is still fluid in the lungs. He sends her to a pulmonologist. The pulmonologist examines her and tells her that she probably has congestive heart failure and sends her to a cardiologist -- who sends her for a stress test. The next morning, she is scheduled for an echocardiogram, but doesn't make it there. She has severe shortness of breath that will not go away and calls 911. The paramedics take her to the emergency room. Her cardiologist is there -- who just received the results of her stress test and was going to call her to come immediately to the hospital. The stress test revealed that she had at least two major heart attacks in the past. He can't determine when, but mom had a complete physical in June, including a n echocardiogram that was normal, so we know it was since that time.

The next day, she undergoes a catheterization that reveals 5 blockages in three arteries to the heart -- one is 90% blocked. She undergoes a triple bypass within a few days. Today, October 5, 2002, she is still in the hospital slowly recovering -- 3 months since her first visit to the doctor.

Could it happen to you (or me)?
Could this have been prevented?

Find out tonight...Gary Haiser

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Remember to always invite a friend to a call!!

Carola Wijas
http://www.acaiplus.com/34497

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