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Myocardial Infarction (Heart Attack)What is myocardial infarction (MI)? Myocardial infarction (MI) is a heart attack. It occurs when there is a sudden, complete blockage of blood flow to a portion of heart muscle. Myocardial infarction is one of the most common diseases in the United States and causes a large number of deaths every year. What are the symptoms? You may feel pressure or pain in the middle of your chest. The pain may extend into your shoulder and arm or into your abdomen or jaw. The pain may be severe. (Some people think they have indigestion and do not get medical help as soon as they should.) Other typical symptoms that often occur with the chest pain are:
In severe cases, sudden death may occur. How is it diagnosed? Your health care provider examines you and asks about your immediate symptoms and your medical history. He or she may use the following tests:
These tests may be done in the hospital or after you leave the hospital. How is it treated? Heart attacks require immediate hospital treatment. Medicines that dissolve the coronary artery blood clot are quickly given through a vein and by mouth. Your doctor may recommend an immediate angiogram and use a special catheter to break up the blockage. Your heart rhythm is monitored and possibly dangerous rhythms are treated promptly. Some people need a temporary heart pacemaker. You may stay in the hospital 2 to 6 days. For part of that time, you will probably be in a special intensive care unit for heart patients. Your health care provider may use medication to:
The exact treatment you receive depends on how you feel, how much heart muscle is damaged, and how much the arteries in your heart are blocked or narrowed. You will be started on beta blocker drugs and aspirin and possibly other medicines to lessen the risk of another heart attack. In some cases, your health care provider may recommend balloon angioplasty to improve blood flow to the heart. This may mean a longer stay in the hospital. You may have a low-level treadmill stress test before you leave the hospital. The results of this test will help your provider decide what treatments and exercise are best for you or may be needed in the future. After a heart attack, it is important to begin a rehab program. This involves a closely watched and gradually increasing exercise program, as well as education about diet and other ways to improve your health and prevent more heart attacks in the future. How does it occur? Myocardial infarction may occur at any time and often occurs without warning. As we grow older, our coronary arteries may become narrowed by the buildup of cholesterol plaque. When the arteries narrow, less blood can go through them and less oxygen gets to the heart muscle. The process of narrowing is called atherosclerosis. The narrower the artery becomes, the more likely it is that a blood clot may form and block the artery completely, causing a heart attack. Sometimes sudden blockages can occur even in places where the artery was not narrow before. A heart attack may occur when the heart muscle needs more oxygen than the blood vessels can provide. This might happen, for example, during hard exercise such as shoveling snow or with sudden increase in blood pressure. The lack of blood and oxygen during a heart attack damages the heart muscle. Part of the heart muscle usually dies. The more heart muscle that dies, the more likely it is that disability or death will result. If only a small amount of heart muscle dies, the odds of surviving and living normally afterward are good. Early treatment of heart attacks is critical to try to unblock the arteries and limit the amount of muscle death. In some cases, death may occur during a heart attack, regardless of the size of the area affected by the blockage. Heart attacks can cause death in several ways:
You are more likely to have a heart attack as you get older. Heart attacks are more likely to occur at a younger age in men than in women. Female hormones seem to help protect women until menopause, when the body produces less of these hormones. Heart disease is more likely to be correctly diagnosed in men and less likely to be suspected in women. Risk factors for heart disease include:
How can I take care of myself? Follow the treatment your health care provider prescribes. In addition:
If you get chest pain, call 911. Immediate emergency care improves your chances of survival and of avoiding damage to your heart.
Information obtained from GE Medical Systems; authorization given to
reproduce on HCNW web site 9/02.
This
content is reviewed periodically and is subject to change as new health
information becomes available. The information is intended to inform and
educate and is not a replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis
or treatment by a healthcare professional.
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