A heart attack as popularized in movies and TV shows is often characterized by a sudden and intense pain in the chest area, leading the person having the attack to clutch his or her chest in pain and typically collapse to the floor. This “Hollywood heart attack” is accurate in some cases, but not all the time. As a matter of fact, many imminent heart attacks are signaled by medical cues and warning signs that are not as sudden or intense as often pictured by most people. What are these distinguishing signs and symptoms of an impending heart attack? Learn all about them below and you may help save someone’s life someday—maybe even that of your own.
- 1. Chest discomfort
An early warning sign of a looming heart attack is a feeling of burning or pressure in the chest area, a sensation that may be described by some as similar to having a pulled muscle. Sometimes it can be a sudden, sharp, stabbing pain, while at other times the discomfort may involve a nagging uncomfortable squeezing or fullness in the chest area.
This feeling of chest pain or pressure is a result of the mounting injury to the heart muscle that occurs in an impending heart attack. A common cause of this injury is the blockage of a coronary artery by fat deposits or a clot. When they are blocked for some reason, the heart is deprived of blood flow and no oxygen and nutrients can reach the heart muscles. The heart tissues become damaged and eventually die, causing the sensations of chest pressure, fullness, or pain.
This chest discomfort may be similar to the experience of angina, or chest pain that occurs in those with coronary artery disease. The difference between the chest pain in angina and that of an impending heart attack is that the latter cannot be relieved by rest. Also, while angina typically occurs only upon physical exertion, chest discomfort in an imminent heart attack occurs frequently even at rest.
- 2. Discomfort in other upper body areas
In an impending heart attack, the chest discomfort or pain felt may radiate to other upper body areas. The person may experience numbness, tingling, or an aching sensation in the upper back, the arm (usually the left), upper or middle abdomen, the jaw, the teeth, or the head. In some cases, headaches may be coupled with dizziness, blurry vision, and fainting.
- 3. General body malaise or unusual fatigue
An early warning of an imminent heart attack is waking up tired and finding normal daily activities more exhausting than usual. These feelings of fatigue and body weakness tend to get worse day after day.
- 4. Heartburn, indigestion, and other digestive problems
In many cases, the chest pain or discomfort in a looming heart attack may be perceived as heartburn by some people. Frequent indigestion, nausea, and vomiting are also other warning signs of an imminent heart attack.
- 5. Sense of impending doom
An imminent heart attack may bring about feelings of anxiety with no known cause, and the person experiences a nagging sense of impending doom. The person may also show signs of pallor, break out in a cold sweat, and have clammy skin.
These signs may occur anytime and they don’t need to be present all at the same time for alarm bells to go off that something might be wrong. If you experience any of them and suspect an impending heart attack, promptly seek medical help to ensure your safety.