Study: Women’s Heart Attacks Not Different

Women’s heart attack symptoms are not much different than men’s, a new study concludes. That’s contrary to other research that found women’s symptoms were often different. The study did not look at people having actual heart attacks. Rather, it looked at 305 people who had angioplasty. This procedure opens a blocked artery by inflating a tiny balloon inside the artery. While the balloon blocks the artery, people often have heart attack symptoms. Researchers asked people about their symptoms. Women reported chest pain, sweating, shortness of breath and pain in the left arm just as often as men. But they reported jaw, neck and throat pain more than men did. Researchers said women should tell doctors about all of their symptoms. They shouldn’t wait to be asked about something specific. The study was presented at a heart conference. The Canadian Press wrote about it October 25.

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