A heart attack (myocardial infarction or MI) is a serious medical emergency whereby the supply of blood to the heart is suddenly blocked, usually by a blood clot. The event can unfold at a lightning pace and your response must be as fast-paced. However, insufficient knowledge of the symptoms often delays the response.
These are:
- Shortness of breath
- Weakness
- Nausea or vomiting
- Dizziness
- Back or jaw pain
- Unexplained fatigue.
According to the health body, “these might be slightly more frequent in women and in older people”.
What’s more, research has shed light on the prevalence and longer-term outcomes of unrecognised heart attacks.
A study reported in JAMA Cardiology identified people who’d experienced heart attacks — some recognised, some not — as well as others who’d never had a heart attack, and followed them all for about 13 years.
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For the study, 935 adults in Iceland with an average age of 76 were followed.
MRI of the heart (which can reveal damage caused by a heart attack) done at the start of the study showed that 17 percent of the participants had at some point had an unrecognised heart attack, while another 10 percent had a recognised heart attack.
After three years, those who’d had unrecognised heart attacks were no more likely to have died than people with no history of heart attack.
But after 10 years, about half of the people with unrecognised heart attacks had died — a rate that was nearly identical to those who’d had recognised heart attacks.
How to reduce your risk
Making lifestyle changes is the most effective way to prevent having a heart attack (or having another heart attack).
According to the NHS, there are three main steps you can take to help prevent a heart attack.
These are:
- Eat a healthy, balanced diet
- Do not smoke
- Try to keep your blood pressure at a healthy level.
You should also shun high-fat foods – continuing to eat high-fat foods will cause more fatty plaques to build up in your arteries, warns the NHS.