Understanding the danger of silent heart attack: Causes, symptoms, solutions

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Few know that heart attacks are silent too but we often picture a heart attack as grimacing from the extreme chest pain and clutching.

Our chest whereas men and women may experience a cardiac arrest in different ways hence, creating awareness about the causes, symptoms, treatment and healthy prevention tips of this lifestyle disease are crucial. A heart attack occurs when the blood flow, which brings oxygen to the heart muscle, is reduced or obstructed due to the blocking or severely narrowing of the arteries that supply the heart.

Did you know you can have a heart attack and not even get to know? Yes, that’s right! It can be a silent heart attack. In an interview with HT Lifestyle, Dr Bipeenchandra Bhamre, Consultant Cardiac Surgeon at Sir HN Reliance Foundation Hospital and Research Centre in Mumbai, shared, “A silent heart attack (silent Ischemia) is a heart attack that has no symptoms, minimal symptoms or even unrecognized symptoms. Many people do not even get to know about it until weeks or months as the symptoms are minimal and one will not take them seriously at all.”

Advising people to not take their health lightly, Dr Bipeenchandra Bhamre spilled the beans on the causes, symptoms, treatment and prevention tips for a silent heart attack.

Risk factors and causes:

You can get a silent heart attack if you are obese, physically inactive, have hypertension, obesity, high cholesterol, diabetes, stress or use tobacco. One can suffer from a silent heart attack when part of the heart muscle is damaged due to the lack of oxygen because of the blocked artery in the heart.

Other causes can be attributed to age, having a family history of heart attack and being a woman can make you fall prey to a heart attack.

Symptoms:

You may feel like you have flu or sore muscle in the chest, jaw pain, tiredness, indigestion, chest pain, shortness of breath, cold sweats, light-headedness, nausea, vomiting and heartburn.

Diagnosis:

Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG), which is a special ultrasound or a CT scan or MRI of your heart can help the expert understand the heart attack.

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