Fiji Sun

Study shows heart attack symptoms in women often misinterpr­eted

- Indian Express

Women were also more likely to perceive their symptoms as stress or anxiety, and were more likely than men to report that their healthcare providers did not think that their symptoms were heartrelat­ed, the researcher­s said. Young women who report heart attack symptoms such as indigestio­n, shortness of breath, palpitatio­ns or pain in the jaw, neck, or arms, were more likely than men to have them dismissed by their doctors as not heart related, raising their risk of death than similarly aged men, finds a new study. Previous studies have reported that women were less likely to present with chest pain for acute myocardial infarction — commonly known as a heart attack — but more likely to report a wider variety of symptoms and also more likely to die in a hospital from the disease. “When young women with multiple risk factors visit their doctor with any chest discomfort or other symptoms that may be associated with ischemic heart disease”, doctors should treat them appropriat­ely, said Gail D’Onofrio from the Yale School of Public Health (YSPH). The research paper, published in the journal Circulatio­n, examined the relationsh­ip between gender, symptoms, perception of symptoms, and care-seeking among patients (2,009 women and 976 men) who were 55 years and younger and were hospitalis­ed for heart attack. The analysis showed that the majority of both men and women reported chest pain, pressure, tightness, or discomfort as their main heart attack symptoms.

Yet, women were more likely than men to report other associated symptoms of heart attack, such as indigestio­n, shortness of breath, palpitatio­ns or pain in the jaw, neck, or arms.

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