Which cardiac conditions require clearance before flying. DVT prevention on long flights. Altitude physiology above 8,000 feet. Medication timing across time zones. The pre-travel cardiac checklist Dr. Nyange uses before patients with heart disease travel internationally.
The vast majority of cardiac patients can travel safely — including internationally, by air, to cruise destinations, and to moderate altitude. The minority who cannot, or who need physician clearance, are identifiable by specific condition and status. The difference between a safe trip and a dangerous one is almost always preparation, not cardiac diagnosis.
This guide provides the specific framework Dr. Nyange uses to assess travel readiness, prepare patients for different travel types, and equip them for what to do if a cardiac issue arises away from home.
A 10-condition table: stable angina (low risk, fly safely) through decompensated HF and post-CABG (do not fly without clearance).
The evidence-based approach for long flights and drives — movement timing, compression stockings, hydration, and aisle seat strategy.
What happens to the cardiovascular system above 8,000 feet and which cardiac conditions are contraindicated at high altitude.
Carry-on only. Medical summary letter. Time zone dose adjustment strategy for anticoagulants and antiarrhythmics.
Medical facility research, travel insurance with evacuation coverage, and the documents that matter in an emergency abroad.
Six-step checklist for any significant trip — when to contact Dr. Nyange, what documentation to carry, what insurance to secure.
“Having heart disease does not mean stopping your life. My patients travel internationally, hike, take cruises, and visit family across the world. The ones who do it safely are the ones who prepare properly: medications in carry-on, a medical letter in their wallet, and a conversation with me before they leave.”
The cardiac travel guide that replaces anxiety with specific preparation.
Get Travel Guide — $37