10 HEART ATTACK Signs MOST People Miss!
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Top Comments (10)
1. Chest pressure 2. Shortness of breath 3. Cold sweat 4. Referred pain in the arm (usually the left), neck (can travel to the jaw), back and shoulders 5. Nausea, indigestion, and abdominal discomfort 6. Dizzy or lightheaded 7. Fatigue 8. Excited or panic attack 9. Palpitations / arrythmias 10. Angst or dread (vague feeling something is wrong)
Dr. Berg and Dr. Ekberg is the reason I am off 27 medication only taking 2 now , used to have 7 doctors now only 2
I'm 75, had two heart attacks/coronary episodes, triple coronary artery bypass surgery, and one coronary artery stent procedure. Dr Sten your description of the symptoms was absolutely spot on accurate. And I'm still here 24 years later and going great thanks to some excellent surgical intervention. Now maintained by Dr Sten's good guidance and Intermittent Fasting.
In the early 1990s I had a doctor who only came in the room for 5 to maybe 8 minutes....each time I knew that I had to find a new doctor So in 1997 I found a doctor who listen, stayed in the room for 40 to 50 minutes and sometimes his nurses come to get on him for taking so long going over everything with me I am still going to this same doctor office
I get most of these symptoms daily during the morning commute to work😅
64yo male... I had random tight feeling across my collarbone for about a month, usually when I got up from sitting and walked for a short while. Then one evening near midnight laying back in the recliner I felt the tight feeling again along with heart palpations. Sipped some water and tried to relax. It did not stop... Got dressed and drove myself the 5 minutes to the ER. Cardiologist found a single 80% blockage and treated it with balloon. Unable to install stent due to location. No permanent damage. All other arteries clean. Went home 1.5 days later. Never felt any extreme pain or extreme pressure.
10 overlooked signs of heart attack: 1. Chest pressure (classic symptom, mostly in men; in women, often accompanied by other signs). 2. Shortness of breath (common in women, especially those with diabetes, even without chest pain). 3. Cold sweat or clamminess (stress response from oxygen drop, seen in both men and women). 4. Referred pain (pain in arm, back, neck, jaw; patterns differ between men and women). 5. Nausea, indigestion, abdominal discomfort (due to vagus nerve stimulation, common in women). 6. Dizziness or lightheadedness (sudden onset; heart not pumping enough oxygen to the brain). 7. Extreme fatigue (sudden, overwhelming tiredness after minimal activity, more common in women). 8. Anxiety or panic attacks (can be mistaken for regular anxiety; low oxygen to brain worsens fear response). 9. Palpitations or irregular heartbeat (heart under stress; electrical misfiring). 10. A vague feeling that "something is wrong" (body sensing issues subconsciously, often accurate).
🔥Watch more life saving videos🔷 Signs & Symptoms of High Blood Pressure: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Nb8wj3x3ak&list=PLpTTF6wMDLR79E3-ijN_r6e8XkU4nQNyl 🔷 Intermittent Fasting: Destroying your Heart? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aUWSlsivFhM&list=PLpTTF6wMDLR79E3-ijN_r6e8XkU4nQNyl
Dr Ekberg with another life saving video, protect this man at all costs!
The best advice I ever ignored was "If you find yourself making excuses for why it can't be a heart attack, you are having a heart attack." I would also add dissociation. The feeling that you are watching yourself from an outside perspective.
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Top Comments (10)
1. Chest pressure 2. Shortness of breath 3. Cold sweat 4. Referred pain in the arm (usually the left), neck (can travel to the jaw), back and shoulders 5. Nausea, indigestion, and abdominal discomfort 6. Dizzy or lightheaded 7. Fatigue 8. Excited or panic attack 9. Palpitations / arrythmias 10. Angst or dread (vague feeling something is wrong)
Dr. Berg and Dr. Ekberg is the reason I am off 27 medication only taking 2 now , used to have 7 doctors now only 2
I'm 75, had two heart attacks/coronary episodes, triple coronary artery bypass surgery, and one coronary artery stent procedure. Dr Sten your description of the symptoms was absolutely spot on accurate. And I'm still here 24 years later and going great thanks to some excellent surgical intervention. Now maintained by Dr Sten's good guidance and Intermittent Fasting.
In the early 1990s I had a doctor who only came in the room for 5 to maybe 8 minutes....each time I knew that I had to find a new doctor So in 1997 I found a doctor who listen, stayed in the room for 40 to 50 minutes and sometimes his nurses come to get on him for taking so long going over everything with me I am still going to this same doctor office
I get most of these symptoms daily during the morning commute to work😅
64yo male... I had random tight feeling across my collarbone for about a month, usually when I got up from sitting and walked for a short while. Then one evening near midnight laying back in the recliner I felt the tight feeling again along with heart palpations. Sipped some water and tried to relax. It did not stop... Got dressed and drove myself the 5 minutes to the ER. Cardiologist found a single 80% blockage and treated it with balloon. Unable to install stent due to location. No permanent damage. All other arteries clean. Went home 1.5 days later. Never felt any extreme pain or extreme pressure.
10 overlooked signs of heart attack: 1. Chest pressure (classic symptom, mostly in men; in women, often accompanied by other signs). 2. Shortness of breath (common in women, especially those with diabetes, even without chest pain). 3. Cold sweat or clamminess (stress response from oxygen drop, seen in both men and women). 4. Referred pain (pain in arm, back, neck, jaw; patterns differ between men and women). 5. Nausea, indigestion, abdominal discomfort (due to vagus nerve stimulation, common in women). 6. Dizziness or lightheadedness (sudden onset; heart not pumping enough oxygen to the brain). 7. Extreme fatigue (sudden, overwhelming tiredness after minimal activity, more common in women). 8. Anxiety or panic attacks (can be mistaken for regular anxiety; low oxygen to brain worsens fear response). 9. Palpitations or irregular heartbeat (heart under stress; electrical misfiring). 10. A vague feeling that "something is wrong" (body sensing issues subconsciously, often accurate).
🔥Watch more life saving videos🔷 Signs & Symptoms of High Blood Pressure: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Nb8wj3x3ak&list=PLpTTF6wMDLR79E3-ijN_r6e8XkU4nQNyl 🔷 Intermittent Fasting: Destroying your Heart? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aUWSlsivFhM&list=PLpTTF6wMDLR79E3-ijN_r6e8XkU4nQNyl
Dr Ekberg with another life saving video, protect this man at all costs!
The best advice I ever ignored was "If you find yourself making excuses for why it can't be a heart attack, you are having a heart attack." I would also add dissociation. The feeling that you are watching yourself from an outside perspective.