The Silent Heart Attack - What You Don"t Know Can Hurt You!
Without this pain, we can not seem to measure the desperate condition that we are under, and our ignorance to the hearts lack of blood and oxygen can mean the difference between a clean bill of health and a drastically reduced life span.
Rather than seeking to identify the most common and painful symptoms of an attack, we need to focus on and monitor the next worst occurrence which tells us that we may be suffering a silent heart attack: breathing.
The main diagnostic problem with silent heart attack is that the blood testing for cardiac heart enzymes can take quite a bit of time, and time is something that we don't have a lot of if we expect to survive heart episodes.
Much like the brain dies when oxygen and blood supply are cut short, even for a short period of time, the heart loses functionality and mass each time, and for each moment that a silent attack strikes.
If you have already suffered such a serious trauma as a stroke or a painful heart attack, you are far more likely to contract the silent type as well.
Also, diabetics are more at risk, men and women over the age 65, and women in general are more susceptible to the uncertain danger of this attack.
Symptoms need to be looked for on a much deeper level with this type of episode, for even with the painful surface factors stripped away, a heart attack is still a lack of blood to the heart.
This can happen due to clogged or collapsed arteries, restricted vessels, or any number of other blood flow or clotting issues that cause this type of deadly circulatory problem.
The silent heart attack will still offer shortness of breath as a symptom, and that signature feeling of doom that most stroke and heart attack sufferers experience just before this life altering event.
Your body knows more about itself than your brain gives it credit for, so be sure to listen intently to all that it tries to tell you.
Silent heart attack victims will also feel jaw and extremity pains, and may feel inexplicably exhausted or fatigued.
If you fear that you may be under any of these conditions, whether you have a past problems or heightened risk factors or not, you should never feel bad about being checked immediately.
This first stage of the attack is the most crucial to treat, so don't waste any time.