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HEART ATTACKS, HERE'S WHAT HAPPENS RIGHT BEFORE IT OCCUR

Despite what you may believe, heart attacks rarely happen “out of the blue.” In fact, your body may be trying to warn you of an impending heart attack for days, weeks, perhaps even a month or two before it occurs. Unfortunately, by the time you actually recognise you’re suffering a heart attack, it could be too late to prevent death or debilitating heart damage.
Statistics show a clear link between a delay in heart attack treatment and death or disability. That’s why it’s essential to know exactly what your heart is trying to tell you with warning signs.
Many people think that heart attacks are a “man’s problem,” yet heart disease is actually the number one killer of both men and women in the United States. In men, the risk for heart attack increases significantly after the age of 45. In women, heart attacks are more likely to occur in the years after menopause (usually, after the age of 50). However, younger men and women can also have heart attacks.
Besides age, factors that increase the risk for heart attack are:
•A previous heart attack or procedure to open up the coronary arteries
•Family history of early heart disease:
   –Father or brother diagnosed before age 55
   –Mother or sister diagnosed before age 65
•Diabetes mellitus
•High blood cholesterol
•High blood pressure
•Cigarette smoking
•Overweight
•Physical inactivity
If you have one or more of these factors, see your health care provider to find out how to reduce your risk of having a heart attack.
Here's what happens
During a heart attack, a clot in the heart’s artery blocks the flow of blood to the heart. Heart muscle begins to die. This is technically called a “myocardial infarction,” meaning “death of heart muscle.” The more time that passes without treatment, the greater the damage. The part of the heart that dies during a heart attack cannot grow back or be repaired.
Fortunately, clot-busting drugs and other artery-opening treatments, such as angioplasty, can stop a heart attack in its tracks. Given soon after symptoms begin, these treatments can prevent or limit damage to the heart. The quicker they are started, the more good they will do and the greater the chances are of a full recovery. To be most effective, these treatments should be given within one hour of the start of heart attack symptoms. The benefit of opening the blocked artery decreases with each passing hour from symptom onset until treatment.
Learn the signs
Many people think that a heart attack is sudden and intense, like the “Hollywood” heart attack depicted in the movies, where a person clutches his or her chest and falls over. The truth is that many heart attacks start as a mild discomfort in the center of the chest. Someone who feels such a warning may not be sure what is wrong. The discomfort (and other symptoms) may even come and go.
Even people who have had a heart attack may not recognise the signs, because the next one can have entirely different symptoms. However, the following signs are pointers…
•Chest discomfort: Most heart attacks involve discomfort in the center of the chest that lasts for more than a few minutes or that goes away and comes back. The discomfort can feel like uncomfortable pressure, squeezing, or fullness.
•Discomfort in other areas of the upper body: Symptoms can include discomfort in one or both arms or in the back, neck, jaw, or stomach.
•Shortness of breath: This symptom often accompanies chest discomfort. However, it can also occur before the chest discomfort.
Other signs: These may include breaking out in a cold sweat, nausea, or light-headedness. Some patients report a sense of impending doom.
Timing is everything
People who experience the warning signs of a heart attack often deny how serious the situation is and take a wait-and-see approach. But time is very important, and anyone with these warning signs needs to get medical evaluation and treatment right away. Don’t wait more than a few minutes — five minutes at most — to get to the doctor!
Remember: Don’t delay
The best way to find out if symptoms are due to a heart attack is to get them checked at a hospital emergency department. In a heart attack, every minute that passes causes more of the heart muscle to die. You can save a life — your own or someone else’s — by getting to the hospital right away.
Doctors and emergency personnel want anyone who may be having a heart attack to come to the emergency department without delay, even if the symptoms turn out to be a false alarm.
Plan ahead
Make a plan now for what you would do if a heart attack should happen. It will save time and could help save a life. To plan ahead:
•Learn the heart attack warning signs listed in this article.
•Talk to your doctor about your heart attack risk and what you can do to reduce it. Ask specifically about aspirin and the use of nitroglycerin.
•Talk with your doctor, family members, friends, and co-workers about the heart attack warning signs and the importance of acting fast.
Knowing what to do if a heart attack occurs could save your life or theirs. go HERE to know if you are at risk

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