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Fatigue Often
Precedes Heart Attacks in Women
Most women who have a heart attack have experienced telltale symptoms,
such as extreme fatigue and sleep disturbance, during the weeks leading
up to the attack, investigators report.
Chest pain, however, is not usually one of these symptoms. According to
their report the American Heart Association’s journal Circulation, Dr.
Jean C. McSweeney and her colleagues believe that doctors sometimes
don’t recognize that a woman is having a heart attack because the
symptoms don’t match those of men, who more commonly experience severe
chest pain.
To further investigate, McSweeney, with the University of Arkansas for
Medical Sciences, Little Rock, and colleagues telephoned 515 women who
had had a heart attack within the previous 4 to 6 months. The women were
asked what symptoms they experienced before and during the heart attack.
Ninety-five percent of the subjects reported unusual symptoms during the
weeks leading up to the heart attack.
“These are symptoms that change in intensity or frequency, or they’re a
brand new appearance, starting in the period prior to their heart
attack,” McSweeney told.
The most frequently reported were unusual fatigue (71 percent) and sleep
disturbance (48 percent). Shortness of breath, indigestion and anxiety
were also common. Less than a third reported chest discomfort, and when
they did it was most often described as pressure, aching or tightness.
“A lot of women ignore these symptoms, thinking it’s just because
they’re ’getting older,”’ McSweeney commented. “But even when they do go
to a physician, their physicians may overlook these symptoms.” These
warning signs can be overwhelming, she said, and shouldn’t be shrugged
off. Some of the subjects said they had been so tired they couldn’t
finish making a bed without having to rest. Others said they had trouble
climbing stairs.
“Women need to explain to their doctor how these symptoms are impacting
their daily life. They should specifically say what they can’t do, so
that physicians can judge how severe this fatigue is.”
When the heart attack occurred, the acute symptoms most commonly
reported were shortness of breath, weakness, unusual fatigue, cold sweat
and dizziness. If they had chest discomfort, they rarely described is as
“pain.”
Most women also had conventional risk factors, such as a history of
cardiovascular disease, diabetes and high blood pressure.
“I’m trying to get women and physicians to look not only at these
symptoms but also at their cardiovascular risk factors, such as
hypertension or a strong family history of heart disease,” to decide
what diagnostic tests should be performed, McSweeney concluded
.—Online |