What to do when you have a heart attack
What happens:


2. Breathlessness, sweating, faintness and a feeling of being generally unwell frequently happen.
3. The heart can sometimes beat irregularly, causing palpitations, sometimes it can stop or beat in an uncoordinated fashion (ventricular fibrillation), leading to sudden death.
Speed is of the essence - both to reduce the amount of heart damage long term, and also reduce the risk of sudden death. In the cardiology literature - "minutes mean muscle', ie the longer the delay, the more heart damage occurs.

While doctors can do –
1. Dissolve the clot with drugs given intravenously (thrombolysis).
2. Remove the clot and open up the arteries in the cardiac catheter lab – angioplasty and stenting.

What you can do –
1. Get to a cardiac unit (or ambulance) as soon as possible.
Call the ambulance using the emergency number (111, 999, 911) and say you have chest pain.
2. Sit down quietly and relax, if you feel faint lie down flat.
3. Chew one aspirin tablet (300 mg) slosh it round the mouth and then swallow it. This prevents the clot in the artery getting bigger.
4. If you have one, use your Nitrolingual spray one or two puffs every five minutes.
5. If you have some available, take some chewable magnesium or liquid magnesium (500 – 1000 mg), and 1000 mg of omega-3 fish oil. Both of these can reduce the risk of cardiac arrest.
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8 year survival curves, shortest delay (top) to slowest (bottom) |
So - getting to hospital as fast as possible saves lives in both the short and longer term. DO NOT DELAY, don't worry about a false alarm or being a nuisance, any chest pain lasting more than 10 minutes, call an ambulance!
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