Tuesday, 25 October 2011

Advice for women with Angina


There is a section that outlines various symptoms that individuals should if they anticipate cardiovascular diseases have in each book on cardiology. However, the symptoms that are listed in most cases the symptoms men experience. Interestingly enough, the symptoms of women with angina vary widely. In fact, refer to the cardiologists symptoms women feel as "atypical". Cardiovascular disease kills more women than men these days, so it must really experience women are typical symptoms and those of the men do not.

Symptoms

Women with angina often feel tenderness to the touch, especially in the jaw, shoulders, arms, back, or burning/hot sensation. In most cases will not women experience breast discomfort. Doctors are aware of the symptoms feel women with angina will suspect a symptom that above the waist of the wife which inconvenience. Unfortunately, many doctors take that women do not experience angina and out of their symptoms to other problems will write.

Women have heart attacks are also probably different symptoms. In many cases, women feel fatigue, indigestion, vomiting, nausea, shortness of breath, but no pain in their chest at all. Of course, these symptoms can be attributed to many other ailments that are not the heart or heart attack and many women go undiagnosed. It is likely that women will experience a silent heart attack and only when other symptoms occur it is clear that she had a heart attack.

The lack of care women with angina pectoris get is shocking especially when it is taken into account that more women than men experience angina. In general, their coronary arteries "normal" look, but they still cause angina.

Another problem for women with angina is that they minimize their symptoms. Women generally have less to complain, which doctors think they General better because they are not complaining. It is important for women to seek help when they are feeling any of the above symptoms and to explain to the doctor in depth their symptoms, they way they are feeling, and the like.

Women who have angina may need to go to the first aid or with their doctor if they get heart palpitations and feel dizzy, pain, or squeezing pressure in their jaw, shoulders, chest, arms or back, that a maximum of 5 minutes or more. Each episode shortness of breath that lasts more than 5 minutes. These are all reasons to go immediately to the doctor.

Symptoms of women with angina may vary so if you are not sure and you think you can be a heart attack, in which symptoms of shortness of breath, severe indigestion or nausea, squeezing or pressure in the chest or back, extreme fatigue, sweating, or a feeling a panic.







No comments:

Post a Comment