6 Symptoms of Women's
Heart Attacks
When a heart attack strikes, it doesn’t always feel the same
in women as it does in men.
Women don't always get the same classic heart attack
symptoms as men, such as crushing chest pain that radiates down one arm. Those
heart attack symptoms can certainly happen to women, but many experience vague or even “silent”
symptoms that they may miss.
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"Does your bra really go up that high?" the TSA
officer asked, running her hands along my chest. My boyfriend, Adam, and I were
headed for a romantic getaway, and being held at airport security wasn't on our
itinerary. "I have a pacemaker. That's a scar, not my bra," I said.
"You're too young for that," she said. While I'm not the only
26-year-old with a pacemaker, I'm the only one most security officers have
seen. Of the pacemakers installed yearly, 84% are for people older than age 65.
Only 6%...
These six heart
attack symptoms are common in women:
1.Chest pain or discomfort. Chest pain is the most common
heart attack symptom, but some women may experience it differently than men. It
may feel like a squeezing or fullness, and the pain can be anywhere in the
chest, not just on the left side. It's usually "truly uncomfortable"
during a heart attack, says cardiologist Rita Redberg, MD, director of Women’s
Cardiovascular Services at the University of California, San Francisco.
"It feels like a vise being tightened."
2.Pain in your arm(s), back, neck, or jaw. This type of pain
is more common in women than in men. It may confuse women who expect their pain
to be focused on their chest and left arm, not their back or jaw. The pain can
be gradual or sudden, and it may wax and wane before becoming intense. If
you're asleep, it may wake you up. You should report any "not typical or
unexplained" symptoms in any part of your body above your waist to your
doctor or other health care provider, says cardiologist C. Noel Bairey Merz,
MD, director of the Barbra Streisand Women's Heart Center at Cedars-Sinai Medical
Center in Los Angeles.
3.Stomach pain. Sometimes people mistake stomach pain that
signals a heart attack with heartburn, the flu, or a stomach ulcer. Other
times, women experience severe abdominal pressure that feels like an elephant
sitting on your stomach, says cardiologist Nieca Goldberg, MD, medical director
of the Joan H. Tisch Center for Women’s Health at NYU Langone Medical Center in
New York.
4.Shortness of breath, nausea, or lightheadedness. If you're
having trouble breathing for no apparent reason, you could be having a heart
attack, especially if you're also having one or more other symptoms. "It
can feel like you have run a marathon, but you didn't make a move,"
Goldberg says.
5.Sweating. Breaking out in a nervous, cold sweat is common
among women who are having a heart attack. It will feel more like
stress-related sweating than perspiration from exercising or spending time
outside in the heat. "Get it checked out" if you don't typically
sweat like that and there is no other reason for it, such as heat or hot
flashes, Bairey Merz says.
6.Fatigue. Some women who have heart attacks feel extremely
tired, even if they've been sitting still for a while or haven't moved much.
"Patients often complain of a tiredness in the chest," Goldberg says.
"They say that they can't do simple activities, like walk to the
bathroom."
Not everyone gets all of those symptoms. If you have chest
discomfort, especially if you also have one or more of the other signs, call
911 immediately
Oral Diabetes
Medications
Oral diabetes medications -- diabetes pills -- help control
blood sugar levels in people whose bodies still produce some insulin (the
majority of people with type 2 diabetes). These diabetes drugs are usually
prescribed to people with type 2 diabetes along with recommendations for making
specific dietary changes and getting regular exercise. Several of these drugs
are often used in combination to achieve optimal blood sugar control.
Remember that people with type 2 diabetes tend to have two
problems that lead to increased sugar (glucose) in the bloodstream:
1.They don't make enough insulin to move glucose into cells
where it belongs.
2.The body's cells become "resistant" to insulin
(insulin resistance), meaning they don't take in glucose as well as they should.
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