Yes but with a doctor's checkup and advice..
A person can prevent congestive heart failure by managing chronic conditions, quitting smoking, eliminating alcohol consumption, maintain proper body weight, and exercising.
Yes, it does in the long run.
slow
If the kidneys did not excrete excess water, a person would fill up with water in their tissues causing edema leading to congestive heart failure, congestive pulmonary failure and death. Unfortunately, this is exactly what happens in kidney failure - the kidneys don't maintain the proper water/salt balance, the body accumulates more water than it needs, the person's blood pressure goes up because the blood volume increases, the heart is damaged by the extra volume and eventually the person dies of congestive heart failure.
85 over 50 is low for anyone.
A heart that has been affected with congestive heart failure will have smaller and harder arteries than a normal heart. That is the only change in the appearance of the heart.
may develop coronary artery disease; congestive heart failure; kidney failure; aneurysm; stroke or other health problems.
Failure to exercise great care that an extraordinarily attentive person would have exercised.
A person can read about the stock market failure in several different places. A person can read history books about the stock market failure, or they can read blogs for first-hand accounts of the event.
having an infected tooth or poor oral hygiene can also increase your chances of problems like heart attacks or heart disease.
Duty of Care, i think
Congestive heart failure is when both the left and the right ventricle cannot function anymore. it'll lead to the low cardiac output and reduce in venous return. People with this problem classically will present as having lower limb/ sacral edema and also pleural effusion (fluid in lung). You can imagine the heart as a box which is so packed with sand that you can neither fill it in with sand anymore nor remove any sand from the box. Symptoms of congestive heart failure also consist of shortness of breath with simple tasks, coughing or inability to breathe when lying flat, chest discomfort and the feeling like you have a chest cold although you do not otherwise feel sick. There are other warning signs that vary from patient to patient.