What causes a heart attack?
2.Atherosclerosis and
angina pectoris
Angina pectoris (also
referred to as angina) is chest pain or pressure that
occurs when the blood and oxygen supply to the heart
muscle cannot keep up with the needs of the muscle.
When coronary arteries are narrowed by more than 50
to 70 percent, the arteries cannot increase the supply
of blood to the heart muscle during exercise or other
periods of high demand for oxygen. An insufficient supply
of oxygen to the heart muscle causes angina. Angina
that occurs with exercise or exertion is called exertional
angina. In some patients, especially diabetics, the
progressive decrease in blood flow to the heart may
occur without any pain or with just shortness of breath
or unusually early fatigue. Exertional angina usually
feels like a pressure, heaviness, squeezing, or aching
across the chest. This pain may travel to the neck,
jaw, arms, back, or even the teeth, and may be accompanied
by shortness of breath, nausea, or a cold sweat. Exertional
angina typically lasts from one to 15 minutes and is
relieved by rest or by placing a nitroglycerin tablet
under the tongue. Both resting and nitroglycerin decrease
the heart muscle's demand for oxygen, thus relieving
angina. Exertional angina may be the first warning sign
of advanced coronary artery disease. Chest pains that
just last a few seconds rarely are due to coronary artery
disease. Angina also can occur at rest. Angina at rest
more commonly indicates that a coronary artery has narrowed
to such a critical degree that the heart is not receiving
enough oxygen even at rest. Angina at rest infrequently
may be due to spasm of a coronary artery (a condition
called Prinzmetal's or variant angina). Unlike a heart
attack, there is no permanent muscle damage with either
exertional or rest angina.
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