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![]() Is It a Heart Attack?By Kim Schworm Acosta Email this article to a friend Last January, Lisa Morrow's 88-year-old grandmother woke her at 3 a.m. complaining of back and shoulder pain and feeling clammy. The two debated what to do for nearly two hours. "I thought it was the flu," says Morrow, a 38-year-old New Yorker. Finally, Morrow convinced her grandmother to go to the ER. Doctors quickly diagnosed a heart attack and put in four stents to open up a fully clogged artery. The surgery helped, briefly, but the attack had weakened the heart muscle so much that it perforated several hours later. Sadly, Morrow's grandmother did not survive. "A heart attack was the last thing on my mind," says Morrow. Indeed, a recent study reveals that while 92 percent of adults know the most obvious sign of a heart attack -- chest pain -- only 31 percent know all five major signs, reports lead author of the study, Jing Fang, M.D., epidemiologist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention. Recognize the Five Major Signs of a Heart Attack
In addition, sometimes the above symptoms are accompanied by nausea or breaking out in a cold sweat, according to the American Heart Association. To Call or Not to Call Keep in mind that when chest pain does occur, it may not be intense. Rather, victims may experience a gnawing discomfort that won't go away, according to Dr. Jois-Bilowich. "If it's just a funny twinge that makes you think, 'Maybe this could be it,' call your primary care doctor for advice," she says. But if your doctor isn't available or it's anything more than "just a funny twinge," call 911 and talk to the dispatcher. Whatever you do, "don't sit at home and try to figure it out," says Dr. Jois-Bilowich. "The important thing is to get some sort of [medical] evaluation quickly." Reasons to Act Fast So memorize the five signs, and if it looks like you or someone you're with may be having a heart attack, don't waste time. Call 911! "If you're wrong and it's not a heart attack, that's not something to be embarrassed about," says Dr. Jois-Bilowich. "You still did the right thing to get it checked out." And if your hunch is right, you may just save the life of someone you love. Kim Schworm Acosta is the former health editor of Shape magazine and a current contributor to Fit Pregnancy and the health director of VIV. Over the past 12 years, she has also written for Family Circle, Brides, Living Fit and Looking Good Now. She lives with her husband and two children in Overland Park, Kan. Article Rating
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