When Palpitations Are an Emergency

When Palpitations Are an Emergency

Go to the emergency room for heart palpitations when they’re paired with chest pain, fainting, severe shortness of breath, severe lightheadedness, or a heart rate over 120 beats per minute at rest that won’t slow down. Also, go to the ER for palpitations lasting more than 20 to 30 minutes,

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Anxiety or Heart Problem

Anxiety or Heart Problem?

Chest tightness from anxiety typically feels sharp or stabbing, stays in one spot, peaks within 10 minutes, and is tied to emotional stress or a triggering thought. Chest tightness from a heart problem typically feels like heavy pressure or squeezing, can spread to the arm, jaw, neck, or back, builds

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Why You're Short of Breath at Night

Why You’re Short of Breath at Night

Shortness of breath at night is most often caused by heart failure, asthma, sleep apnea, COPD, GERD-related airway spasm, anxiety, or allergic reactions to bedroom triggers like dust mites or pet dander. The most serious of these is heart failure, which can cause a frightening symptom called paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea

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Is Your Left Arm Pain a Heart Attack

Is Your Left Arm Pain a Heart Attack?

Left arm pain is more likely to be a muscle strain when it’s localized, tender to the touch, worse with movement, and not accompanied by other symptoms. Left arm pain is more likely a heart attack when it’s a heavy, dull, or pressure-like ache that doesn’t change with movement, comes

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Is Jaw Pain a Heart Attack Symptom

Is Jaw Pain a Heart Attack Symptom?

Yes, jaw pain can be a heart attack symptom, and it’s one of the most under-recognized warning signs. Cardiac jaw pain is diffuse, hard to pinpoint, often described as a deep ache or pressure, and usually appears alongside other symptoms like chest pressure, shortness of breath, nausea, or sweating. It

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What Does Chest Pain That Comes and Goes Mean

What Does Chest Pain That Comes and Goes Mean

Intermittent chest pain can come from the heart, lungs, digestive system, muscles and ribs, or anxiety, and figuring out which one requires more than a self-check. The most important fact about chest pain that comes and goes is this: just because it stops doesn’t mean it’s safe. Heart attack pain

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