5 Surprising Signs of an Unhealthy Heart

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http://www.caring.com/articles/surprising-signs-unhealthy-heart?utm_medium=partner&utm_source=msn

By Melanie Haiken, Caring.com senior editor
We've all read the signs of a heart attack listed on posters in the hospital waiting room. But what if there were other, earlier signs that could alert you ahead of time that your heart was in trouble?

It turns out there are. Researchers have done a lot of work in recent years looking at the signs and symptoms patients experienced in the months or even years leading up to a heart attack. "The heart, together with the arteries that feed it, is one big muscle, and when it starts to fail the symptoms can show up in many parts of the body," says cardiologist Jonathan Goldstein of St. Michael's Medical Center in Newark, New Jersey. Here are five surprising clues that your heart needs checking out. Any of these signs -- and particularly two or more together -- is reason to call your doctor for a workup, says Goldstein.

1. Neck pain
Feel like you pulled a muscle in the side of your neck? Think again, especially if it doesn't go away. Post-heart attack, some patients remember noticing that their neck hurt and felt tight, a symptom they attributed at the time to muscle strain. People commonly miss this symptom because they expect the more dramatic acute pain and numbness in the chest, shoulder, and arm. Women in particular are less likely to experience heart pain that way, and more likely to feel twinges of pain and a sensation of tightness running along the shoulder and down the neck, says Margie Latrella, an advanced practice nurse in the Women's Cardiology Center in New Jersey and coauthor of Take Charge: A Woman's Guide to a Healthier Heart (Dog Ear, 2009). The pain might also extend down the left side of the body, into the left shoulder and arm.

Why it happens: Nerves from damaged heart tissue send pain signals up and down the spinal cord to junctures with nerves that extend out into the neck and shoulder.

What distinguishes it: The pain feels like it's radiating out in a line, rather than located in one very specific spot. And it doesn't go away with ice, heat, or muscle massage.


2. Sexual problems
Having trouble achieving or keeping erections is common in men with coronary artery disease, but they may not make the connection. One survey of European men being treated for cardiovascular disease found that two out of three had suffered from erectile dysfunction for months or years before they were diagnosed with heart trouble. Recent studies on the connection between ED and cardiovascular disease have been so convincing that doctors now consider it the standard of care to do a full cardiovascular workup when a man comes in complaining of ED, according to cardiologist Goldstein says. "In recent years there's been pretty clear evidence that there's a substantially increased risk of heart attack and death in patients with erectile dysfunction," Goldstein says.

Why it happens: Just as arteries around the heart can narrow and harden, so can those that supply the penis. And because those arteries are smaller, they tend to show damage much sooner -- as much as three to four years before the disease would otherwise be detected.

What distinguishes it: In this case, the cause isn't going to be immediately distinguishable. If you or your partner has problems getting or maintaining an erection, that's reason enough to visit your doctor to investigate cardiovascular disease as an underlying cause. "Today, any patient who comes in with ED is considered a cardiovascular patient until proven otherwise," says Goldstein.




3. Dizziness, faintness, or shortness of breath
More than 40 percent of women in one study published in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association, reported having experienced shortness of breath in the days before a heart attack. You might feel like you can't breathe, or you might feel dizzy or faint, as you would at high altitude. If you can't catch your breath while walking upstairs, vacuuming, weeding the garden, or doing other activities that previously caused you no trouble, this is a reason to be on the alert.

Why it happens: Not enough blood is getting through the arteries to carry sufficient oxygen to the heart. The heart muscle pain of angina may also make it hurt to draw a deep breath. Coronary artery disease (CAD), in which plaque builds up and blocks the arteries that feed the heart, prevents the heart from getting enough oxygen. The sudden sensation of not being able to take a deep breath is often the first sign of angina, a type of heart muscle pain.

What distinguishes it: If shortness of breath is caused by lung disease, it usually comes on gradually as lung tissue is damaged by smoking or environmental factors. If heart or cardiovascular disease is the cause, the shortness of breath may come on much more suddenly with exertion and will go away when you rest.

4. Indigestion, nausea, or heartburn
Although most of us expect pain from any condition related to the heart to occur in the chest, it may actually occur in the abdomen instead. Some people, particularly women, experience the pain as heartburn or a sensation of over-fullness and choking. A bout of severe indigestion and nausea can be an early sign of heart attack, or myocardial infarction, particularly in women. In one study, women were more than twice as likely as men to experience vomiting, nausea, and indigestion for several months leading up to a heart attack.

Why it happens: Blockages of fatty deposits in an artery can reduce or cut off the blood supply to the heart, causing what feels like tightness, squeezing, or pain -- most typically in the chest but sometimes in the abdomen instead. Depending on which part of your heart is affected, it sends pain signals lower into the body. Nausea and light-headedness can also be signs that a heart attack is in progress, so call your doctor right away if the feeling persists.

What distinguishes it: Like all types of angina, the abdominal pain associated with a heart problem is likely to worsen with exertion and get better with rest. Also, you're likely to experience repeated episodes, rather than one prolonged episode as you would with normal indigestion or food poisoning.

5. Jaw and ear pain
Ongoing jaw pain is one of those mysterious and nagging symptoms that can have several causes but can sometimes be a clue to coronary artery disease (CAD) and impending heart attack. The pain may travel along the jaw all the way to the ear, and it can be hard to determine which it's coming from, says cardiovascular nurse Margie Latrella. This is a symptom doctors have only recently begun to focus on, because many patients surveyed post-heart attack report that this is one of the only symptoms they noticed in the days and weeks leading up to the attack.

Why it happens: Damaged heart tissue sends pain signals up and down the spinal cord to junctures with nerves that radiate from the cervical vertebrae out along the jaw and up to the ear.

What distinguishes it: Unlike the jaw pain caused by temporomandibular joint disorder (TMJ), tooth pain, or ear infection, the pain doesn't feel like it's in one isolated spot but rather like it's radiating outward in a line. The pain may extend down to the shoulder and arm -- particularly on the left side, and treatments such as massage, ice, and heat don't affect it.

Go to: 1 | 2 | 10 Ways You Can Help Prevent a Heart Attack

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:eek::eek: WOW. I never would have thought that some of these symptoms would actually be heart related
 
Funny I just went to the dr this week about the neck pain and dizziness, and while I was there I said all of sudden I'm getting real bad indigestion. Now I'm concerned, he said pinched nerve in the neck, and the indigestion and dizziness is coming from a medicine I'm taking because I'm not eating prior to taking it, which the instructions says too


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
had quadruple bypass surgery
at the age of 42 years old
I made it to 46

the paragraph about heart burn
is how I found out I had 79% blockage
on the left side of heart.

there is one more I didn't see as far as
heart conditions
skin color

I am a light skinned black man and my skin tone was almost kinda gray looking
the reason for the gray looking appearance was because
I wasn't getting the proper amount of blood though
my body which in turn gave me a light gray appearance.
 
had quadruple bypass surgery
at the age of 42 years old
I made it to 46


the paragraph about heart burn
is how I found out I had 79% blockage
on the left side of heart.

there is one more I didn't see as far as
heart conditions
skin color

I am a light skinned black man and my skin tone was almost kinda gray looking
the reason for the gray looking appearance was because
I wasn't getting the proper amount of blood though
my body which in turn gave me a light gray appearance.

we have ghost on bgol now :confused::confused::confused::confused:
 
we have ghost on bgol now :confused::confused::confused::confused:



I would probably be dead right now if I didn't pay attention to my body

its no joke
you are not full fucking gray
but if your light skinned you will have a grayish pale look aka flush looking
I swear I didn't believe it but its true
its just another way of looking for symptoms of a bad heart
 
Believe it or not shortness of breath , inability to lay flat in bed with out having breathing problems.
Dramatic and or sporadic weight gain even by as little as 2 to 3 pounds in a day.
 
Same here... I tell cats all of the time if there is no wood in your wood have your heart checked!

when i got very sick that was a sign that i ignored...

I would probably be dead right now if I didn't pay attention to my body

its no joke
you are not full fucking gray
but if your light skinned you will have a grayish pale look aka flush looking
I swear I didn't believe it but its true
its just another way of looking for symptoms of a bad heart

not making a joke the way it read... you had the bypass at 42 and you were gone at 46
 
Fitness refers to your heart muscle. The stronger your heart, the more fit you are. The only stimulus that makes any muscle stronger is to exercise that muscle against increasing resistance. To make your skeletal muscles stronger, you have to lift heavier weights or press against greater resistance in any weight-bearing exercise. The only way that you can strengthen your heart muscle is to exercise against greater resistance also.

When you use your legs, your leg muscles squeeze blood from the veins near them toward your heart. Then, when your leg muscles relax, the veins near them fill with blood. This alternate contraction and relaxation of your leg muscles acts as a second heart pushing huge amounts of blood towards your heart. To pump the extra blood from your legs to your heart and then to your body, your heart muscle has to squeeze harder and faster. The harder you exercise, the more blood is pumped by your legs to your heart, and in turn, the harder your heart has to work to push it out towards your body, so your heart has to beat faster and with more force to do more work.

Fitness is determined more by how hard you exercise than by how long you exercise. Exercising at a casual pace does not do much to strengthen either your heart or your skeletal muscles. When you work harder, more blood returns to your heart, and this increased amount of blood fills the inside of your heart and stretches it, so your heart has to pump against greater resistance and the heart muscle becomes stronger. :cool:
 
hey check yourself
bros and siestas are dropping like fly's
from heart attacks
if heart problems run in your family
you definitely need to check yourself asap.
cause it is hereditary
 
we have ghost on bgol now :confused::confused::confused::confused:

mystery-machine3.jpg
 
I'm experiencing No.1 severely at the moment. It first developed about 6 months ago and after 6 weeks of agony went in for Chinese electronic acupunture which was fantastic and i was fine after just one session. I am in my doctors on Tuesday and now after reading this will definetly not let this thread go unheaded.
 
I'm experiencing No.1 severely at the moment. It first developed about 6 months ago and after 6 weeks of agony went in for Chinese electronic acupunture which was fantastic and i was fine after just one session. I am in my doctors on Tuesday and now after reading this will definetly not let this thread go unheaded.
watch yourself big bro:cool:
 
:smh::smh:

most of this list is bullshit.

dizziness? you can feel dizzy from a ton of things and at any age even though you are 110% healthy.

always remember, even the people who work in the medical field have to remain relevant, keep you coming into their offices, and keep those ads popping up on the right side of their web sites. :hmm:
 
Thanks....I have a few of these symptoms and seeing them all together just encouraged me to schedule an appointment.
 
:smh::smh:

most of this list is bullshit.

dizziness? you can feel dizzy from a ton of things and at any age even though you are 110% healthy.

always remember, even the people who work in the medical field have to remain relevant, keep you coming into their offices, and keep those ads popping up on the right side of their web sites. :hmm:



Which is true to a point dude if your feeling dizzy it's not because your body is working great and it could be from a cranial nerve deficit to you stood up too fast but better to cautious than to leave it alone unless your thoroughly educated in the medical field then you really need to leave the diagnosing to proper people man I mean it's like reading an auto book and suddenly feeling like your ready to rebuild a transmission or you know all the ins and outs of a car
 
gonna pass the word to older relatives and family members
this can possibly increase the life span for some of my folks
:thumbsup:
 
Fitness refers to your heart muscle. The stronger your heart, the more fit you are. The only stimulus that makes any muscle stronger is to exercise that muscle against increasing resistance. To make your skeletal muscles stronger, you have to lift heavier weights or press against greater resistance in any weight-bearing exercise. The only way that you can strengthen your heart muscle is to exercise against greater resistance also.

When you use your legs, your leg muscles squeeze blood from the veins near them toward your heart. Then, when your leg muscles relax, the veins near them fill with blood. This alternate contraction and relaxation of your leg muscles acts as a second heart pushing huge amounts of blood towards your heart. To pump the extra blood from your legs to your heart and then to your body, your heart muscle has to squeeze harder and faster. The harder you exercise, the more blood is pumped by your legs to your heart, and in turn, the harder your heart has to work to push it out towards your body, so your heart has to beat faster and with more force to do more work.

Fitness is determined more by how hard you exercise than by how long you exercise. Exercising at a casual pace does not do much to strengthen either your heart or your skeletal muscles. When you work harder, more blood returns to your heart, and this increased amount of blood fills the inside of your heart and stretches it, so your heart has to pump against greater resistance and the heart muscle becomes stronger. :cool:

you speak the truth
 
Which is true to a point dude if your feeling dizzy it's not because your body is working great and it could be from a cranial nerve deficit to you stood up too fast but better to cautious than to leave it alone unless your thoroughly educated in the medical field then you really need to leave the diagnosing to proper people man I mean it's like reading an auto book and suddenly feeling like your ready to rebuild a transmission or you know all the ins and outs of a car

- by all means, get yourself checked out or ask somebody about it...

but good lord, it doesn't mean you may be at risk for a heart attack or that u are about to die sometime soon (unless u let us look at you :rolleyes:)

i'm not a huge skeptic of doctors like that, but let's keep it real: doctors are the reason why so many americans are hooked on pills like they are now

and if u run up on a doctor and tell them your nose was bleeding last night, their natural instinct is to tell you to "get that checked out", when all u need is probably to tilt your head back for a little bit, clean that shit up and keep it moving.

they save lives and do great things - but they are hustlers too. never forget that.
 
This is really good info, but at the same time, try not to panic and become hypochondriacs. Keep this info in mind, but if you're experiencing one or two of these, it doesn't mean that you'll be dead next week. Just keep getting regular check ups, and keep it moving.
 
good info...oh yeah, make sure you get a yearly check-up from your family dr..and when you talk with your dr, dont be afraid to ask him or her anything..i mean anything
 
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