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Heart Attack / Chest Pain Symptoms
A heart attack, or myocardial infarction, occurs when one or more regions of the heart muscle experience a severe or prolonged decrease in oxygen supply caused by blocked blood flow to the heart muscle.
The blockage is often a result of atherosclerosis - a buildup of plaque, known as cholesterol, and other fatty substances. Plaque inhibits and obstructs the flow of blood and oxygen to the heart. Heart attacks typically occur when plaque in a coronary artery tears. A blood clot forms rapidly over the plaque, blocking blood and oxygen flow to the heart. If the blood and oxygen supply is cut off severely or for a long period of time, muscle cells of the heart suffer severe and devastating damage and die. The result is damage or death to the area of the heart that became affected by reduced blood supply.What are the risk factors for heart attack?
There are two types of risk factors for heart attack, including:
| Inherited (or genetic): | Acquired: |
| These are risk factors you are born with that cannot be changed, but can be improved with medical management and lifestyle changes. | These are risk factors that are caused by activities that we choose to include in our lives that can be managed through lifestyle changes and clinical care. |
Who is most at risk - inherited (genetic) factors?
- persons with inherited hypertension (high blood pressure)
- persons with inherited low levels of HDL (high-density lipoprotein) or high levels of LDL (low-density lipoprotein) blood cholesterol
- persons with a family history of heart disease (especially with onset before age 55)
- aging men and women
- persons with diabetes mellitus (type 1 diabetes)
- women (after the onset of menopause) - generally, men are at risk at an earlier age than women, but after the onset of menopause, women are equally at risk.
Who is most at risk - acquired risk factors?
- persons with acquired hypertension (high blood pressure)
- persons with acquired low levels of HDL (high density lipoprotein) or high levels of LDL (low density lipoprotein) blood cholesterol
- cigarette smokers
- people who are under a lot of stress
- individuals who lead a sedentary lifestyle
- persons overweight by 30 percent or more
- persons with type 2 diabetes
Managing heart attack risk factors:
Managing your risks for a heart attack begins with:
- examining which of the risk factors apply to you, and then taking steps to eliminate or reduce them.
- becoming aware of conditions like hypertension or abnormal cholesterol levels, which may be "silent killers."
- modifying risk factors that are acquired, not inherited, through lifestyle changes. See your physician as the first step in starting right away to make these changes.
- consulting your physician soon to determine if you have risk factors that are genetic or inherited and cannot be changed, but can be managed medically and through lifestyle changes.
- using medication prescribed by your physician that lowers cholesterol and reduces the risk of heart attack.
What are the warning signs of a heart attack?
The following are the most common symptoms of a heart attack. However, each individual may experience symptoms differently.
Chest pain
Indigestion
If you, or someone you know exhibits any of the above warning signs, act immediately. Call 911, or your local emergency number. The earlier a heart attack is treated, the less the damage to the heart.
The goal of treatment for a heart attack is to relieve pain, preserve the heart muscle function, and prevent death.
Treatment in the emergency department may include:
This symptom can include the following sensations:
Although chest pain is the key warning sign of a heart attack, it may be confused with indigestion, pleurisy, pneumonia, or other disorders.
Also known as upset stomach or dyspepsia, this painful or burning feeling in the upper abdomen that may be accompanied by:
Responding to heart attack warning signs:
Treatment for a heart attack:
Once the condition has been diagnosed and the patient stabilized, additional procedures to restore coronary blood flow may be utilized. Those procedures include:
