Story by: Kim Huston on January 9, 2018
It comes on out of nowhere: a terrible feeling of dread. You feel a sharp, stabbing pain in your chest. You feel like you can’t breathe and you start shaking. Your heart feels like it’s running a mile a minute. Panic attack vs heart attack — what are the differences?
Panic attacks can be terrifying. You may feel like you’re dying, even though you’re not in any real danger. If you’ve never had a panic attack, or even if you have, how do you know it’s not a heart attack?
Panic attacks can happen at any time, which makes them especially scary for people who experience panic disorder.
Women are twice as likely as men to have a panic attack. Women also are more prone to migraine than men. One study found most women who have panic attacks suffer from migraine as well. Women who experience both had more frequent and longer-lasting panic attacks. Women over age 50 who have heart disease are more likely to have panic attacks as well.
As with panic attacks, women experience different heart attack symptoms than men. Because of this, women may not even know that anything is wrong. Women often explain away heart attack symptoms as acid reflux, the flu or aging, even though heart disease is the No. 1 killer of women in the U.S. Panic attacks can be another reason a woman may delay getting care.
Panic attack symptoms include:
If you experience panic attacks and have a risk for heart disease, talk to your doctor about what symptoms should immediately trigger a trip to the emergency department.
If you’ve never had a panic attack and you’re not sure? It’s better to be evaluated immediately — don’t explain away symptoms. Call 911 and be transported to the hospital via ambulance. That way, emergency medical responders can monitor you and provide important information to your emergency doctors. Every minute matters with a heart attack — time saved is heart muscle saved.
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