Chest  pain or pressure is a common symptom of heart attack. Cardiac chest  pain is often vague, or dull, and may be described as a pressure or  band-like sensation, squeezing, heaviness, or other discomfort. Heart  attacks frequently occur from 4:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m.due to higher  adrenaline (a hormone that prepares the body for fight or flight) levels  released by the adrenal glands during the morning hours. Interestingly,  heart attacks do not usually happen during exercise, although exercise  is commonly associated with angina (heart pain). Approximately 1/4th of  all heart attacks are silent i.e. without associated chest pain. In  diabetics, the incidence of “silent” heart attacks may be much higher.
Heart attack victims may complain of:-
>chest pressure,
>sweating,
>jaw pain,
>heartburn and/or indigestion,
>arm pain (more commonly the left arm, but may be either),
>upper back pain,
>general malaise (vague feeling of illness),
>nausea,
>shortness of breath.
Heart attack victims may complain of:-
>chest pressure,
>sweating,
>jaw pain,
>heartburn and/or indigestion,
>arm pain (more commonly the left arm, but may be either),
>upper back pain,
>general malaise (vague feeling of illness),
>nausea,
>shortness of breath.
According  to statistics, heart attacks prove fatal in approximately one-third  cases. A heart attack, therefore, requires immediate medical attention.  Survivors of a heart attack always run the risk of, heart failure due to  weakness of the heart muscle, heart rhythm disturbances, and  reinfarction (a repeat heart attack). Therefore, at the first signs of  even one of the symptoms of a heart attack, such as a sudden chest pain  brought on either by exercise or with no apparent cause, and that does  not improve with rest or medication- a doctor should immediately be  consulted.








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