Heart attack symptoms in women
May 5, 2010
For most women symptoms of a heart attack are commonly diagnosed, because they disguise as many other common illnesses in which most people usually get over on their own. Studies show that heart attack symptoms in men and women differ, therefore making slightly easier for symptoms to go unnoticed in most women. For most women heart attack symptoms are generally overlooked even in the emergency room. Most women ignore heart attack symptoms themselves because they identify the symptoms as menopause or other signs of aging. Cardiologist say men and women should not take bodily change lightly. There is a reason for everything that occurs in the body and doctors should be asked questions about any sudden change.
If heart attack is in the family history that individual should have annual heart scans and take other prevention precautions. A CT heart scan can help identify early heart disease and ultimately save a life. If early heart disease is detected then a cardiologist will help to identify the foods one should eat and the kind of activity that one can do. Although it is essential to have these test such as heart scans and is some cases even a 64 slice ct scan test done if doctors cannot identify the problem with other ways if one is aware of the symptoms further damage and test can be prevented.
Women survivors of heart attacks share that they experienced a change in their life for up to a month before the heart attack occurred. More than 70% of women experienced sever fatigue. Sever fatigue entails shortness of breath and wheezing after activities that wouldn’t usually tire that person so easy. Over 50% of women noticed a significant change in sleeping pattern. The same positions were no longer comfortable, restlessness throughout the night and short intervals of sleep. Men and women heart attack survivors both report chest pain or pressure. Men reported the chest pain as being intense while women report it as uncomfortable and possibly feeling like a muscle strain because the pain travels to underneath the jaw line at times. 40% of women reported some type of change in skin tone and temperature. Most women say their skin was clammy and occasionally experienced cold sweats.
Most of the women in this heart attack study experienced flu like symptoms. Nausea, vomiting, chills, coughing, aching and sneezing. For a large amount of these symptoms most people don’t think to visit a doctor. Most of these symptoms will persist and that is when an appointment with a doctor or cardiologist should be scheduled if you experience a sudden onset of these please visit a local emergency room. Most of the time the symptoms will be over looked, so cardiologist suggest you ask the doctor attending if it is possible that you’ve had a heart attack?


