English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

i am a competitive swimmer and train very often, but unfortunately when we do really hard sets which require you to swim fast for a longer distance i often get a pain in either my neck or heart area. It feels like there is ahole in my heart or neck and every time i breathe in there is a sharp pain. this means i have to slow right down and breathe to the other side which is more uncomfortable for me.


does anyone have any advice or is a doctor and could help/advise me ?

its beginning to become very annoying and has occured when i was racing before which was very annoying and painful !!

please help me.

2007-02-18 05:26:26 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Health General Health Care Pain & Pain Management

4 answers

You may have sprained your chest wall. All the movement of the arms and shoulders have pulled the muscles in your chest. I would suggest some anti-inflammatory meds (Advil, Motrin, aleve) to reduce the muscle inflammation. Or, you can go see a doctor if it gets too bad. There may be an underlining problem.

2007-02-18 05:31:52 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Did you injure yourself? You might have a cervical disc that is protruding and resting to your spinal column which might intent affliction to go down one or each of your arms, the discomfort might also radiate to your chest muscular tissues. Other signs would be tingling or numbness, certainly in fingers, muscle spasms, head aches. The one method to particularly see is through having an MRI, an x-ray can be performed first before a MRI can be completed. If in case you have coverage, look up a Neurologist in your plan and go see him. If no coverage, become a member of a affliction management application in a health facility the place you are living, they have charity care programs where it'll fee you nothing to a small percent in line with your wages, the ache management can diagnos and treat you, so can a neurologist, think better.

2016-08-10 16:23:15 · answer #2 · answered by ireland 4 · 0 0

Muscles can have knots (trigger points) that make them tight which in turn put pressure on nerves and other things.
Molasses - a couple of swigs or Bananas 1 or 2 - both contain magnesium and potassium for muscles.
Try working with the principles taught in The Trigger Point Therapy Workbook by Davies.
I use a chiropractor and massage therapist with it

2007-02-20 16:18:20 · answer #3 · answered by Keko 5 · 0 0

go to the person in a white coat and get a proper diagnosis

2007-02-18 05:34:22 · answer #4 · answered by Exterminator 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers