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Can extended pain in your body cause a heart attack?

2007-01-09 06:48:49 · 4 answers · asked by me 6 in Health Diseases & Conditions Heart Diseases

4 answers

Logic says yes. Pain can cause stress, and stress is known to sometimes be one of the triggers of a heart attack, or a trigger of other conditions, such as high blood pressure etc., which might be part of the cause of a heart attack.

Logic also says pain can make a heart attack worse. If you have chest pain, for example, from injuries and/or a disease, the sudden onset of heart attack symptoms might seem like the same pain getting worse, so you might not notice the heart attack, until it does more damage than it would have if you had known about it.

On the other hand, if pain makes you take aspirin, and aspirin reduces the odds of a heart attack, the pain could actually be an indirect factor in reducing the risk and/or making the heart attack less severe.

A lot of people think that anytime you have chest pain you should rush to an emergency room. But is that really true? If you have chest pain, should you always rush to the emergency room?

That question is not as obvious as it seems. If you have a history of frequent symptoms similar to heart attack symptoms, but it always turns out to be indigestion or whatever, then obviously you aren't going to rush to the emergency room each time, especially if it happens 100 times per year.

And if it turns out to be indigestion, you shouldn't even take aspirin for it.

But those symptoms happen to a lot of people, and imply that if they ever have a real heart attack, they won't be aware of it, because the symptoms cried wolf too many times.

Those people need a better way to recognize a real heart attack. A more precise way to tell the difference between real heart attack symptoms and false alarms. That could save their lives a lot more than rush surgery, because they're not likely to be in the ER in time, if they think their symtoms are the usual false alarm.

A cardiologist somewhere should write an article that goes into great detail of how to tell the difference between real symptoms and false alarms.

2007-01-09 07:37:34 · answer #1 · answered by x4294967296 6 · 1 0

1

2016-05-18 07:42:34 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Most middle assaults are induced via a blood clot that blocks probably the most coronary arteries. The coronary arteries deliver blood and oxygen to the center. If the blood drift is blocked, the center starves for oxygen and middle cells die. Occasionally, surprising overwhelming pressure can cause a middle assault. Chest suffering is a primary symptom of middle assault. However, a few individuals can have very little chest suffering, chiefly the aged and the ones with diabetes. This is referred to as a silent middle assault. The suffering could also be felt in just one facet of the frame or transfer out of your chest on your fingers, shoulder, neck, enamel, jaw, stomach field, or again. The suffering will also be extreme or slight. It can suppose like: Squeezing or heavy stress A tight band across the chest Something heavy sitting to your chest Bad indigestion Pain most often lasts longer than 20 mins. Rest and a remedy referred to as nitroglycerine don't totally relieve the suffering of a middle assault. Other signs of a middle assault incorporate: Shortness of breath Nausea or vomiting Anxiety Cough Fainting Lightheadedness - dizziness Palpitations (feeling like your middle is thrashing too quick) Sweating, that may be severe So sure it would be pressure. But there's a probability that it would be some thing extra critical. You must have her get looked at.

2016-09-03 19:03:41 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I have never heard of simple pain casuing a heart attack. Unresolved pain or severe anxiety can casue the body to secrete the "fight or flight" hormone in your body called epipehrine. This speeds up all body processses and also contricts the coronary arteries in your heart so that the heart has to work harder to push the bloos through to you body. If you do have some blockage, or atherosclerosis, this could casue you to have pain. Best advice...get it checked out!

2007-01-09 08:22:47 · answer #4 · answered by Fred 2 · 1 0

It is very unlikely that pain by itself can cause a heart attack

2007-01-09 06:57:45 · answer #5 · answered by Orinoco 7 · 1 0

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