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How to Survive a Heart Attack - The First 24 Hours

How do you tell there's a problem?

By Richard N. Fogoros, M.D., About.com

Updated: November 25, 2006

About.com Health's Disease and Condition content is reviewed by our Medical Review Board

What symptoms should tip you off?

The classic symptoms of a heart attack include intense, sometimes squeezing, chest pressure or pain, often radiating to the jaw or left arm, and frequently accompanied by profuse sweating, or a nearly overwhelming sense of fear or impending doom.

Unfortunately, many patients with heart attacks do not have this classic presentation. Their discomfort may be relatively mild, and may be localized to the back, abdomen, shoulders, or either or both arms. Nausea and vomiting, or merely a feeling of heartburn, may be the only symptom. These less classic symptoms may not make patients think of a heart problem, and may keep them from seeking medical help. Indeed, up to 30% of heart attacks are diagnosed by taking a routine ECG long after the fact.

This is why people with one or more risk factors for coronary artery disease need to pay close attention to any unusual symptoms involving the upper half of the body. This warning would apply, for instance, for any middle-aged or older person who is obese, sedentary, a smoker, a diabetic, overweight, has high cholesterol, or has a family history of heart disease. (Ideally, of course, such people will have been evaluated by a competent physician who will have screened them for the presence of coronary artery disease, coached them on risk factor modification, and heightened their awareness of potential cardiac problems.)

What should you do if you think you might be having a heart attack?

If you experience any symptoms suggestive of heart attack, especially if you know you have risk factors for coronary artery disease, your key to avoiding death or permanent disability is to get yourself to medical help as soon as possible. If you live in an area where paramedics can get to you within a few minutes, then call for them. If it would be quicker to have someone drive you to a hospital, then do that. But get help right away. If you are having a heart attack, every minute is vitally important. And while you’re waiting for the paramedics, or while being driven to the hospital, take an aspirin.

The patient’s reluctance to get medical help is the most common reason for critical delays in therapy for heart attacks. It is probably coded into all of our genes to want to say, “This can’t be my heart. It’s got to be something else. I’ll just wait a little while and see if it goes away.” As difficult as it is to push aside this natural tendency toward denial, if you know you’ve got an increased risk of heart disease, that’s what you need to do. This is one time you really need to listen to your body; if it feels like there is something terribly wrong, there probably is.

What medical personnel should do when you arrive

They should be taking your symptoms very seriously. This is not one of those times when you should expect to show up in the emergency room and sit around for two hours waiting for a sullen, gum-snapping clerk to take your insurance information. Instead, this is one of those times when they should immediately place you into a treatment room, and several individuals should simultaneously hook you up to a cardiac monitor, start an I.V., give you some oxygen, get an ECG, draw some blood tests, and begin asking you questions about your symptoms and examining your heart.

To make sure you elicit the correct response from emergency personnel, you’ve got to say the magic words as soon as you arrive. The magic words are, “I think I’m having a heart attack.”

Don’t tell them you’re here because your shoulder hurts, or you think you have heartburn, or that you have any of the other alternate possibilities you’ve imagined for yourself. Your attitude should not be, “It’s probably nothing, so I won’t make a big deal. Let them figure out if it’s my heart.” If that’s your approach, you’ll get the sullen, gum-snapping treatment, precious minutes (or even hours) will be wasted, and you’ll pay a heavy price.

Page 3 - What should the doctors be doing?

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Heart Disease

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