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Heart Dangers for Women Sometimes Not Obvious

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Friday, March 1, 2013   

PHOENIX – A sharp pain or a tight feeling in the chest, along with shortness of breath, are well known warning signs of a heart attack.

But according to the American Heart Association (AHA), those are typical signs of a heart attack in men. For women they can be different.

Teri Arnold, director of marketing and communications for the American Heart Association, says it's not unusual for women to think they've come down with the flu.

"It could be a pain in your neck, could be a pain in the jaw, a pain in your back, nausea,” she says. “Sometimes women have a shortness of breath for a number of weeks and don't realize that it has something to do with their heart."

The AHA recommends that women know your numbers. Visit the doctor at least once a year to know your blood pressure, your fasting blood glucose levels, your cholesterol levels and your weight – all risk factors for heart disease and all can be controlled, thus preventing a heart attack.

Arnold says nearly as many women die from heart disease now as men in Arizona, and awareness of risk factors and symptoms is key – something that Gail Alexander Wright is keenly aware of. She suffered a heart attack at age 37 a few years ago and had symptoms for weeks before.

"I had pain in the left side of my neck for three weeks straight,” she recalls. “It would go away, come back, go away, come back – and then the tightening of the jaw on and off for three weeks."

Arnold says there are many misconceptions about women and heart disease – like they have to be older to have a heart attack, or heart attacks are not common for women.

Arnold says many doctors and hospitals have been slow to keep up with the new realities for women.

"I've heard many, many instances of women that are having the signs and symptoms of a heart attack,” Arnold says. “They go into the ER and they're told, well you're having a panic attack, you're too young to have heart disease, you have asthma."

Arnold says women need to be their own advocates and ask their doctor for tests, especially if there is a family history – and be sure to let your primary care physician know. She says the AHA is working on educating doctors and hospitals about the risk factors for women.





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