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Chest pain

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Chest pain
Chest pain may be serious and you should always seek urgent medical help. Chest pain may be caused by poor blood flow to the heart leading to angina or by a sudden blockage in the coronary arteries resulting in a heart attack.

 


Chest pain
Definition
Chest pain is discomfort or pain that you feel anywhere along the front of your body between your neck and upper abdomen.

Chest Pain Overview
If you are having severe pain, crushing, squeezing, or pressure in your chest that lasts more than a few minutes, or if the pain moves into your neck, left shoulder, arm, or jaw, ...

Chest Pain / Heart Attack Symptoms
What is a heart attack (myocardial infarction or MI)?

Chest pain is any sort of pain felt in your upper body, from your shoulders down to your ribs.
Although it can be a symptom of many conditions, chest pain must be taken seriously as it could mean you are having a heart attack.

Chest pain
Alternate Names : Chest tightness, Chest pressure, Chest discomfort
Definition ...

Chest Pain
Heart Disease (Coronary Artery Disease) Slideshow Pictures
Medical Illustrations of the Heart Image Collection ...

Chest Pain
Date updated: April 27, 2007
Jan Nissl, RN, BS
Content provided by Healthwise
Topic Overview ...

Chest Pain CenterThe focused experience and expertise of Jefferson cardiologists can mean the difference between life and death.
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Chest Pain and Angina
Angina: Don't Take It Lightly
Heart disease remains the number one killer in the United States, and each case is a potential failure because risk management wasn't aggressive enough.

Chest Pain
Chest pain is pain or discomfort felt anywhere along the front of the body between the neck and upper abdomen.

About Chest Pain
Chest pain is one of the most common reasons people call for emergency medical help. Chest pain doesn't always signal a heart attack. Often it's unrelated to the heart.

Chest pain may start in the chest, and spread to the throat, jaw, shoulder blades, or arms (left or right).
Chest pain may be sharp or burning in character
You may experience a feeling of chest heaviness, or tightness.

Chest pain
In medicine, chest pain is a symptom of a number of serious conditions and is generally considered a medical emergency.

Chest Pain: A Merck Manual of Patient Symptoms podcast
Chest pain is a very common complaint. Many patients are well aware that it is a warning of potential life-threatening disorders and seek evaluation for minimal symptoms.

CHEST PAIN CAUSES
Chest pain generally originates from one of the organs in the chest (heart, lung, or esophagus) or from the components of the chest wall (skin, muscle or bone).

Chest pain is discomfort or pain that you feel anywhere along the front of your body between your neck and upper abdomen.
Alternative Names
Chest tightness; Chest pressure; Chest discomfort ...


Chest Pain: When in Doubt Have It Seen
University of Iowa Health Science Relations and
Richard Kerber, MD
Professor of Internal Medicine
First Published: 2000
Last Revised: October 2004
Peer Review Status: Internally Peer Reviewed ...

Causes of chest pain can vary from minor problems, such as indigestion or stress, to serious medical emergencies, such as a heart attack or pulmonary embolism. The specific cause of chest pain is often difficult to interpret.

Although chest pain can have many origins, true angina is a symptom of inadequate blood and oxygen supply to the heart, a condition most often due to plaque in the arteries (also called ischemic or coronary heart disease).

More complex tests may be required depending on the difficulty of diagnosis or the suspected cause of the chest pain.
Prevention:
Make healthy lifestyle choices to prevent chest pain from heart disease: ...

What is Chest Pain & Tightness?
Every year millions of people develop chest pain and tightness, ranging from the common cold, flu, coughs, allergies to more serious illnesses such as pneumonia, asthma and emphysema.

Chest pain is discomfort that is located between the top of the belly and the base of the neck. Chest pain that is not caused by a heart problem is called noncardiac chest pain.

Left side chest pain
The various aches and pains that you can feel in your body are collectively frightening, especially if you are not a doctor, nurse, emergency medical technician or other experienced medical professional.

Fortunately, chest pain doesn't always signal a heart attack. Often it's unrelated to any heart problem.

Stable angina: chest pain is brought on when the heart has to work harder.
Unstable angina: there is no pattern to chest pain and it can happen when the heart is resting.

Heart Disease and Angina (Chest Pain)

The most common symptom of coronary artery disease is angina or "angina pectoris," also known simply as chest pain.

Chest pain. You may feel pressure or tightness in your chest, as if someone were standing on your chest. The pain is usually triggered by physical or emotional stress. It typically goes away within minutes after stopping the stressful activity.

Chest Pain an Overview
Chest pain is supposed to be the most frightening thing that a person can have, ...

Chest Pain: Many people having heart attacks report chest pain in the center of the chest that lasts for more than a few minutes. Sometimes the pain will go away and then return.

Chest pain
Such pain could be a symptom of indigestion, a heart attack or another condition. Because chest pain could be serious, it should be evaluated promptly, the AAFP says.

Chest pain and heart attack
Chest discomfort or pain is a key warning symptom of a heart attack Opens New Window. Heart attack symptoms include: ...

Chest pain when breathing
Recent/chronic productive cough
A cough that begins suddenly, sometimes mixed with blood-streaked sputum, is a frequently-seen symptom of pulmonary embolism, ...

Chest pain or aches. This pain may be worse when you breathe in.
Frequent cough. This may occur with bloody phlegm.
Wheezing.

chest pain
Chest pain associated with MVP is different from chest pain associated with coronary artery disease (feels different, has different trigger, and different period of duration) and is a frequent complaint.

Chest pain and coughing up blood (haemoptysis) are not common features of COPD. It is possible to have slightly blood-streaked sputum when you have a chest infection.

Chest pain
Pleuritis, also called pleurisy, occurs in up to half of the affected individuals in certain ethnic groups. The pain is usually on one side of the chest. Pericarditis would also be felt as chest pain.
Joint pain ...

Cardiac Chest Pain: The classic description of cardiac chest pain is crushing, heavy or dull pain below the sternum (chest bone) that may extend up to the neck, shoulders or arms, and shortness of breath.

Chest pain can be a symptom of many different disorders, ranging in significance from minor to life threatening.

Chest pain or other symptoms of heart disease. Your doctor will ask you to describe your pain. Also, he or she will want to know where the pain starts and if it spreads to other parts of your body. Your doctor will also ask when the pain happens.

Chest pain that is typically severe and crushing with a feeling just behind the breastbone (the sternum) of pressure and suffocation, due to an inadequate supply of oxygen to the heart muscle.

Chest pain and shortness of breath due to blood clots forming in the blood vessels in your lungs and heart.
Pain, redness, warmth, and swelling in the lower leg due to blood clots forming in the deep veins of your leg.

chest pain, worsens with breathing
pain and tenderness at junction between ribs and breastbone
shortness of breath - difficulties breathing ...

Chest pain or tightness
Feeling generally unwell
Loss of appetite
Finger clubbing, in some cases, caused by a build-up of fluid
Weight loss ...

Chest pain on exertion,
Shortness of breath on exertion, due to impaired relaxation of the heart muscle,
Palpitation, as a result of an abnormal heart rhythm,
Fainting, usually after exertion, ...

Chest pain from pericarditis may increase or decrease when one changes positions. Lying down may be particularly uncomfortable. Even a transition from sitting to standing can cause the pain of pericarditis to either improve or get worse.

Chest pain
Weakness
Pounding in the chest
Feeling faint
Diagnosis
The first person to respond to a cardiac arrest should check if the person is responsive. Shake the shoulders and ask, "Are you OK?" If there is no response, call 9-1-1.

Chest pain, the feeling of food stuck in the throat, or heaviness or pressure in the neck or upper or lower chest when eating are frequently the result of swallowing difficulties.
Causes ...

chest pain
breathlessness
cough
coughing up blood
fainting
The symptoms you have and how severe they are will depend on how big your pulmonary embolism is. If you have a small embolism you may not have any symptoms at all.

Chest pain is a nonspecific symptom that can have cardiac or noncardiac causes (see Differentials). The term angina is typically reserved for pain syndromes arising from presumed myocardial ischemia.

Chest pain, usually a central, crushing pain, which may travel into the left arm or up into the neck or jaw, and persists for more than a few minutes. Unlike angina, the pain doesn't subside when you rest.

chest pain that:
can be felt especially behind the breastbone, and sometimes beneath the clavicle (collarbone), neck, and left shoulder.

Chest pain (angina) or discomfort, often described as a heavy, tight feeling in the chest or a burning, choking, or squeezing that may spread to the arms, shoulders, or neck.

Chest pain
Loss of appetite/weight loss
A crackling sound in the lungs while inhaling.

Chest Pain in Infants and Children
Fever in Infants and Children
Shortness of Breath in Infants and Children ...

Chest pain
Abnormal pulse
If your child has any of these symptoms, get medical care right away. In severe cases, this condition can lead to a heart attack or a ruptured fistula.
Diagnosis TOP ...

Chest pain
May move (radiate) to the neck, shoulder, back or abdomen
Sharp, stabbing
Pain increases with breathing
Sitting up or standing relieves pain ...

Chest pain.
Trouble breathing.
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Chest pain
Review Date:10/17/2006
Reviewed By: Benjamin W. Van Voorhees, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor of Medicine and Pediatrics, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.
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