Image: iStock
By Garry Jennings, Baker IDI Heart & Diabetes Institute
Most people usually link the phrase “heart attack” with “massive”; something you are indisputedly aware of.
Some are massive and, in these instances, it’s relatively easy to know if it is indeed a heart attack. Typically, there will have been crushing chest pain lasting more than a few minutes. One would hope this has led to an immediate call to 000 and a trip in an ambulance to hospital.
Often ambulance officers will have performed an electrocardiogram (ECG) and transmitted the results to the hospital, which will have selected and be ready with the appropriate treatment. In this case, the chest pain and the characteristic ECG changes are enough – those wiggly lines mean a lot to an experienced reader.
However, most heart attacks are not “massive”. In these instances, further tests are necessary and the diagnosis can become quite challenging. The pain may not be typical and the ECG may be normal or difficult to interpret.
Watch: How much do you know about ovarian cancer? We look at the symptoms. (Post continues after video.)