www.theheartcarecenter.com Review:

The Heart Care Center of Northwest Houston - The Heart Care Center of Northwest Houston provides the highest quality of Heart Care, treating patients with dignity, respect and confidentiality. We offer a spectrum of preventative cardiac services including ECG, Treadmill Stress test, Exercise Nuclear Stress test, Nuclear Stress test, Addenosine Nuclear Stress test, Echo Cardiogram, Dobutamime Nuclear Stress test, Echo Cardiogram, Carotiod Study, Venos Doppler Study, 24 Hour Holter Monitor, Event Recorder and Pacemaker check and Reprogramming

  • http://www.theheartcarecenter.com/mukarram-baig.html Dr. Mukarram A. Baig | Northwest Houston Cardiologist - Dr. Mukarram Baig is a cardiologist in Houston, Texas and is affiliated with multiple hospitals in the area, including Cypress Fairbanks Medical Center and Houston Methodist Hospital. He received his medical degree from Aga Khan Medical College and has been in practice for 25 years.
  • http://www.theheartcarecenter.com/kamran-sherwani.html Dr. Kamran K. Sherwani | Northwest Houston Cardiologist - Dr. Kamran Sherwani is a cardiologist in Houston, Texas and is affiliated with multiple hospitals in the area, including Cypress Fairbanks Medical Center and Houston Methodist Hospital. He received his medical degree from Rawalpindi Medical College and has been in practice for 27 years.
  • http://www.theheartcarecenter.com/rupin-kadakia.html Dr. Rupin A. Kadakia | Northwest Houston Cardiologist - Dr. Rupin Kadakia is a cardiologist in Houston, Texas and is affiliated with multiple hospitals in the area, including Cypress Fairbanks Medical Center and Houston Methodist Hospital. He received his medical degree from Baylor College of Medicine and has been in practice for 20 years.
  • http://www.theheartcarecenter.com/mohammed-khan.html Dr. Mohammed S. Khan | Northwest Houston Cardiologist - Dr. Mohammed Khan is a cardiologist in Houston, Texas and is affiliated with multiple hospitals in the area, including Cypress Fairbanks Medical Center and Houston Methodist Hospital. He received his medical degree from Ross University School of Medicine and has been in practice for 13 years.
  • http://www.theheartcarecenter.com/faisal-arain.html Dr. Faisal A. Arain | Northwest Houston Cardiologist - Dr. Faisal Arain is a cardiologist in Houston, Texas and is affiliated with multiple hospitals in the area, including Cypress Fairbanks Medical Center and Houston Methodist Hospital. He received his medical degree from Aga Khan Medical College and has been in practice for 16 years.
  • http://www.theheartcarecenter.com/northwest-houston-cardiology-consultation.html Cardiology Consultation | The Heart Care Center of Northwest Houston - A pacemaker is a small unit that helps your heart beat more regularly. It does this with a small electric stimulation that helps control your heartbeat. Your doctor puts the pacemaker under the skin on your chest, just under your collarbone. It’s hooked up to your heart with tiny wires.
  • http://www.theheartcarecenter.com/northwest-houston-ecg.html What Is an ECG? | The Heart Care Center of Northwest Houston - A stress test, sometimes called a treadmill test or exercise test, helps your doctor find out how well your heart handles its workload. As your body works harder during the test, it requires more fuel and your heart has to pump more blood. The test can show if there’s a lack of blood supply through the arteries that go to the heart.
  • http://www.theheartcarecenter.com/northwest-houston-cardiac-catheterization.html What Is Cardiac Catheterization? - Angioplasty opens blocked arteries and restores normal blood flow to your heart muscle. It is not major surgery. It is done by threading a catheter (thin tube) through a small puncture in a leg or arm artery to the heart. The blocked artery is opened by inflating a tiny balloon in it.
  • http://www.theheartcarecenter.com/northwest-houston-coronary-stents.html What Is a Coronary Stent? | The Heart Care Center of Northwest Houston - A stent is a tiny wire mesh tube. It props open an artery and is left there permanently. When a coronary artery (an artery feeding the heart muscle) is narrowed by a buildup of fatty deposits called plaque, it can reduce blood flow. If blood flow is reduced to the heart muscle, chest pain can result. If a clot forms and completely blocks the blood flow to part of the heart muscle, a heart attack results.

    Country: 206.188.193.252, North America, US

    City: -81.5401 Florida, United States

  • Leanne Thompson - Great makeup brush!

    I received this product quickly and in a nice sleek box. It was a lot larger than I expected. The handle was a nice polished rose gold and had a black rubbery handle tip. The brush head was nice and large and smooth. The bristles felt great and worked great. The makeup goes on smooth and the brush glides across your face easily. It makes your foundation go on smoothly with no lines or thickness. I was really surprised with how nice this brush was and how well it was made and how well it worked. I really enjoy this company and I have ordered several products from them. All of the products are always great quality and great packaging. I recommend this if you are looking for a nice makeup brush to add to your collection. I received this product at a discounted rate in order to give an honest review of the product. I always leave completely honest reviews so that customers can have an idea of what to expect when ordering a product. I personally read reviews when trying to decide whether or not to order a product because I cannot see or touch the product.

  • love it - Oro Gold and Vivo Vine Vera are scamss=

    Made false claims about there product that irritated my skin from the test sample she applied.When I tried to return it thirty minutes later she said it was supposed to do that,I said no. She then tried to get me to make an exchange because apparently they do not do refunds, I said I was not interested in anymore of the products after a negative affect from one,She still insisted that was normal. She then told me they would not trust me taking the stuff I paid over 400$ for that they might not would credit me then.She tried to get me to talk to "the manager" on the phone I refused. So I left the products and am out over 400$.Yay. The products also didnt have the stuff listed in the ingredients that she claimed it to have. Fun day. Not

  • gripper - Three across the backseat fit perfectly!

    I have a Volvo XC70 and three small grandchildren. I owned Two Britax convertible carseats and one Britax infant carseat that just fit across the back seat. Now with the youngest graduating from his infant seat, getting three convertible carseats across the back seat was a challenge. I could not get another Britax convertible to fit with the two other carseats.After researching other carseats I found the Clek Fllo. It is smaller in width 16.9 " compared to other seats that are 19". I am able to get three of the Clek Fllo comfortably across the back seat. Even with the middle one rear facing. Very nice well made seats and easy to install. I wasn't sure I wanted to put out more money for three of these seats but I am glad I did. Well worth the money and much cheaper than having to buy a bigger vehicle. Probably the last carseats I will ever have to buy.

  • R. Ault - Disappointing, to say the least.

    First things first, let me be clear about the fact that my experience with Kaspersky's competitors, and with Kaspersky's free online scanner services, had led me to expect that at worst this package would be no more troublesome and probably better at keeping current with its detections than the Norton Internet Security installation that I bought it to replace. Although it does, indeed, seem to catch the incoming viruses attached to emails that Norton had been missing far too often, that is the ONLY place where it shined. A full system scan that was started at 5AM has just reached 93% at 10:30PM (yes, that's 17 1/2 hours later) and much of the first 17 hours was spent with the CPU load stuck at 100% even though the system was being used for nothing else except a little light web browsing on occasion. And, although it was initially configured to install updates fully automatically, it asked for confirmation before downloading updates last Sunday, and then stalled at 17% for two days -at which point I noticed the error and rebooted the system. I am very confident that this is entirely due to shortcomings in the Kaspersky package, given that neither Norton nor Kaspersky has yet found any *active* malware on this system. There were some malware files in old archives which I knew about, but nothing had gotten past the combination of antivirus utils, Spybot, Malware Bytes, and my own paranoia. (Plus, running AVG against the system's boot drive, with it removed and hooked up as an external drive on another machine, found nothing as well. I do that from time to time just for the sake of being thorough.) And as for that known malware in the archives on the data drive, Kaspersky's handling of the trove in those archives was neither graceful nor efficient. And if you're a veteran techie who keeps things like the Ultimate Boot CD handy as a means of dealing with borked disk file systems and the like, be aware that Kaspersky's default settings are going to generate a long list of warnings of "legitimate programs that can be used by criminals to harm your computer." So will the remote tech support utilities that are supplied with a number of other legitimate program packages. In short, this program's initial performance has been horribly unimpressive, the system resource hit from a full scan was ENORMOUS, and the level of smarts evident in the Chicken-Little-like behavior around certain common files was not a trust-builder. I doubt that I will be keeping this installed; it's probably going to be replaced by another copy of Norton Internet Security. My paranoia is an adequate deterrent against email attachment bombs. And I'm not going to put up with things that take this long to run and break this easily.