Health alert: Half of heart attacks show no symptoms, can be fatal
Heart patients, you have got to be more cautious. Almost half of all heart attacks show no obvious symptoms, but can still be life-threatening, claims a new research.
Heart patients, you have got to be more cautious. Almost half of all heart attacks show no obvious symptoms, but can still be life-threatening, claims a new research.
Conducted on more than 9,000 middle-aged men and women, it’s one of the biggest studies to examine so-called silent heart attacks, and to also explore them across racial and gender groups.
Researchers at Wake Forest University’s medical school led the government-funded study. Results were published online Monday in the American Heart Association’s journal, Circulation.
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The details
Middle-aged adults from four US communities were enrolled. The study’s aim was to examine causes of age-related artery damage that can lead to heart disease. Participants had periodic clinic exams including electrocardiograms and phone interviews with the researchers. They were followed for about 13 years.
Results
Overall, 45 percent of heart attacks were the silent kind, which are usually discovered some point later when a patient has an abnormal EKG reading that suggests previous heart damage.
Silent heart attacks were found on EKGs in 317 participants, or about 3 percent, who hadn’t had suspicious symptoms. By contrast, 386 patients, or 4 percent, had full-blown heart attacks with symptoms. Symptoms often include chest pain, jaw and arm pain and shortness of breath. Silent heart attacks may cause mild fatigue or other vague symptoms that don’t seem serious.
The risks
About 1,830 participants died during the study, 189 of them from heart disease. Those who had silent heart attacks were three times more likely to die from heart-related causes during the study than those without heart attacks. Among participants who had classic heart attacks, these deaths were five times more common than among those without heart attacks.
Comparisons
Both types of heart attacks were most common in men. Classic heart attacks were more common in white men; the rates were about equal in black men.
Among black women, silent heart attacks were more common than classic attacks; among white women the rates were about the same.
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Previous studies on the prevalence of silent heart attacks have had varying results ranging from about 20 percent to 60 percent of all heart attacks. The authors of the current research note that many were on smaller, less diverse groups of patients.
Smoking and family history of heart disease were slightly less common among silent heart attack patients but otherwise the groups were pretty similar.
Recommendations
Government data show that each year more than 700,000 Americans have heart attacks and about 120,000 people die from them. Once discovered, the researchers say silent heart attacks should be treated as aggressively as classic ones. That includes getting blood pressure and cholesterol under control, maintaining a healthy weight and getting lots of exercise.
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