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What Does a Heart Attack Actually Feel Like?

Heart attack

Woman having heart attack

When it comes to heart attacks, most people immediately think chest pain with pain in the left arm. While those are two of the main warning signs of a heart attack, there are actually an abundance of other symptoms people experience that indicate they’ve suffered a heart attack.

According to WebMD, “More than 1 million Americans have heart attacks each year. Also called myocardial infarction, or MI, heart attacks can be deadly if medical care isn’t received quickly.”

Luckily, medical research is paving the way to a quicker diagnosis that can save more lives. Did you know when someone goes to the hospital worried they’re experiencing heart attack symptoms, they have to take tests and wait up to six hours for the results? If urgency is the key to care, that doesn’t seem quite right.

The American Heart Association announced in Circulation that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved a new blood test that quickly measures the amount of troponin T in your system. This protein is released when the heart muscle is damaged. The more the heart is damaged, the larger the amount of troponin T.  This new test can potentially rule out a heart attack in less than an hour.

What’s interesting about the research for that blood test is over the course of three months 536 patients visited the emergency room with heart attack symptoms: 60% chest pain, 16% shortness of breath and 24% other complaints. That means more than 120 people went to the ER with unexpected heart attack symptoms.

So how do you know if you’re having a heart attack? What does it feel like?

According to the American Heart Association, these are the most commonly reported warning signs of a heart attack:

The reality is heart attacks are not always a dramatic occurrence like we see on TV and in movies. Sometimes heart attack symptoms can be as subtle as feeling like you have the flu. But heart attacks are deadly, so if you “feel” something that’s not right and you’re worried, you can’t take any chances.

And what about the aspirin trick?

Nieca Goldberg, M.D., medical director for the Joan H. Tisch Center for Women’s Health at NYU’s Langone Medical Center and an American Heart Association volunteer says, “Many women I see take an aspirin if they think they are having a heart attack and never call 9-1-1. But if they think about taking an aspirin for their heart attack, they should also call 9-1-1.”

Do you know what a heart attack feels like? How would you describe it? Help other people recognize the warning signs by sharing your story in the comments section.

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