Last year when i was 27 i had a strange feeling in my chest after smoking a cigarette, i didn't smoke for 4 years in row. After 2 minutes i got very nervous and i felt overall very strange.
Two days later i smoked another cigarette and the same feeling started again, but this time it felt like ants are running up my neck. After 5 minutes and calming down me teeth started to itch. From day to day i got more and more weaker. After 4 days i couldn't walk more then 25 meters without pain in my chest and short breathing. Thankfully one of my co-workers dad is a doctor and he said that he wants to take a look on me. After i arrived at his office i had to walk up 20 stairs and when i opened the door i've fall down on the floor.
Immediately two people took me to a room where they checked some stuff. My doctor made some tests and he said that it doesn't look like a heart attack but something is wrong with one of the lines on my ECG. He asked me if its ok to call the ambulance for doing more checks at the hospital. I said yes, please.
5 minutes later ambulance arrived and took me to the hospital. I was quite unsure if i should be happy or not as my doctor said it doesn't look like a heart attack. In the emergency room they took my blood to check if troponin is in my blood. The test was negative. I told them my history and the history of my dad who had his first heart attack with 36. I had 92 kg at 172cm. They made some other checks and everything said my heart seems to be normal, except one line on the ECK. The doctor said i have to stay for at least 1-2 days for additional tests.
First night, they check my blood pressure shortly before i slept. 180 / 130 @ 80 bpm. They gave me some stuff to get it down to a normal value. First morning, i woke up. I had pain in my chest so hard the i was close to fall out of the bed. Rolled left, rolled right. 2 minutes and 20 clicks on the emergency button later a nurse came into my room and gave me painkillers. 10 minutes later ECK + blood test. Everything negative except that one little line in the ECK. Two hours later i they made the first test. They brought me to the ultra sonic room were they took a look on my heart. 10 Minutes later they said, everything looks normal. One day later the next test. Cycling. I had to stop after 2 minutes and a pulse rate of 120bpm. The nurse asked me if i am serious that i cant ride more. They expected me to get up to 180bpm. The doctors got nervous, my blood tests are still negative, no troponin and the ECK is also negative, except one line. They decided to make a test called echocardiography. While watching my heart the gave me a medicament to speedup my heartbeat. When they hit 120bpm i started to sweat, at 130bpm they gave my emergency medicaments to calm me down. It took almost 30 minutes and 1 lorazepam to calm me down.
After that test they put me to the intensive care unit. For the first time they found troponin in my blood. I had 10+ cables all over my body. Every 4-5 hours they made blood tests, also when i slept. They gave me blood thinner and tranquilliser. After 4 days in intensive care unit they made a cardiac catheterization and they found a 99% closed vessel after 10 minutes. Another 10 minutes later i had my first stent. The complete process took around 45 minutes always with full consciousness. I felt horrible but i was so lucky that they found the problem. One day later the doctor told me what happened and what the future is. They said i can live a normal life without the risk of a heart attack but i have to change my life radically. So i did. One year later i am doing sports multiple times per week. I lost over 15kgs, never touched a cigarette again and i feel so much healthier now.
My doctor told me after everything was over that 3-4 weeks later i would be dead without help. My heart has no damage and only 2 little 30% spots are left. As long as i live a normal life and i don't want to run marathon i wont have problems in the future. The little strange ECK line is also normal now =)
I hope that my english didn't distract you at all, i want to show that even not normal signals of a heart attack can be a sign of much bigger problems coming up.
For the first time they found troponin in my blood
Probably a selfish, personal comment, but I immediately searched for the word "troponin" in this thread and smiled to see it in the second post.
As an engineer having spent the last decade or so on an instrument that, among other analytes, measures the level of troponin in your blood (serum), it's quite satisfying to remember that my work is saving lives. Sure, you may not have been analyzed by one of our instruments, but somewhere a group of software, electrical, mechanical and biomedical engineers out there suffered through the miasma of FDA-required procedures, onerous development process, reviewing every line of code, arguments about exactly what a STAT reponse means, ridiculous training requirements, long validation procedures run by the most anal testers ever and ended up with an instrument that helped save your life.
It might not be as exciting as state of the art webapps, but it's nice to be reminded that we matter.
Well yeah, it might not be as exciting as webapps, but that's the difference between a job and a hobby. If your daily job includes exactly the kind of craftsmanship you could spend years doing happily, that's great; but if your job is more boring than that, you still have a few hours each day to devote to the more exciting kind of software development. However, in the meantime, your job, as boring as it might be on the worst days, is still saving lives and working for the good of the society. Hell, I wish I could say the same about my job (which may affect millions of people around the world, but in a far less relevant way).
Yes, you do matter. People are better off thanks to you. Sincerely: congratulations, you're a lucky man.
>I hope that my english didn't distract you at all, i want to show that even not normal signals of a heart attack can be a sign of much bigger problems coming up.
It is my experience that those who self-apologize for their "poor" English skills are the ones who have the least to apologize for. You have a better grasp of the English language than most college graduates in the United States.
Thank you for this comment. For about a year and a half I've had problems with shallow breathing that have gotten worse and now just become normal (I always feel like I need to get a full breath, and can never do it because I breathe too shallowly when trying.) I have been having chest pains frequently. I went to see a doctor and without even listening to my chest said it was anxiety and to go see a psychiatrist.
That was a couple months ago. I think I'm going to go somewhere again. Maybe a psychiatrist, maybe a different doctor.
I'm the kind of person who just sits on things without really caring, and I probably do need to get this checked out.
I had a similar experience. Not to discourage or demoralise you, but keep a close check on your cardiovascular system. I had 3 relapses (stenosis) since my first stents in October 2010. Did (and continue to do so) all the right things, have all the right measurements, blood and fat values. Yet every year in January/February I'm taken back to cardio-surgery for yet another stent because of yet another stenosis. Hope you fare better.
Thank you so sharing, it's a good reminder that careful focus on health can't take a backseat forever. It's great to hear how much better you're doing now.
Two days later i smoked another cigarette and the same feeling started again, but this time it felt like ants are running up my neck. After 5 minutes and calming down me teeth started to itch. From day to day i got more and more weaker. After 4 days i couldn't walk more then 25 meters without pain in my chest and short breathing. Thankfully one of my co-workers dad is a doctor and he said that he wants to take a look on me. After i arrived at his office i had to walk up 20 stairs and when i opened the door i've fall down on the floor.
Immediately two people took me to a room where they checked some stuff. My doctor made some tests and he said that it doesn't look like a heart attack but something is wrong with one of the lines on my ECG. He asked me if its ok to call the ambulance for doing more checks at the hospital. I said yes, please.
5 minutes later ambulance arrived and took me to the hospital. I was quite unsure if i should be happy or not as my doctor said it doesn't look like a heart attack. In the emergency room they took my blood to check if troponin is in my blood. The test was negative. I told them my history and the history of my dad who had his first heart attack with 36. I had 92 kg at 172cm. They made some other checks and everything said my heart seems to be normal, except one line on the ECK. The doctor said i have to stay for at least 1-2 days for additional tests.
First night, they check my blood pressure shortly before i slept. 180 / 130 @ 80 bpm. They gave me some stuff to get it down to a normal value. First morning, i woke up. I had pain in my chest so hard the i was close to fall out of the bed. Rolled left, rolled right. 2 minutes and 20 clicks on the emergency button later a nurse came into my room and gave me painkillers. 10 minutes later ECK + blood test. Everything negative except that one little line in the ECK. Two hours later i they made the first test. They brought me to the ultra sonic room were they took a look on my heart. 10 Minutes later they said, everything looks normal. One day later the next test. Cycling. I had to stop after 2 minutes and a pulse rate of 120bpm. The nurse asked me if i am serious that i cant ride more. They expected me to get up to 180bpm. The doctors got nervous, my blood tests are still negative, no troponin and the ECK is also negative, except one line. They decided to make a test called echocardiography. While watching my heart the gave me a medicament to speedup my heartbeat. When they hit 120bpm i started to sweat, at 130bpm they gave my emergency medicaments to calm me down. It took almost 30 minutes and 1 lorazepam to calm me down.
After that test they put me to the intensive care unit. For the first time they found troponin in my blood. I had 10+ cables all over my body. Every 4-5 hours they made blood tests, also when i slept. They gave me blood thinner and tranquilliser. After 4 days in intensive care unit they made a cardiac catheterization and they found a 99% closed vessel after 10 minutes. Another 10 minutes later i had my first stent. The complete process took around 45 minutes always with full consciousness. I felt horrible but i was so lucky that they found the problem. One day later the doctor told me what happened and what the future is. They said i can live a normal life without the risk of a heart attack but i have to change my life radically. So i did. One year later i am doing sports multiple times per week. I lost over 15kgs, never touched a cigarette again and i feel so much healthier now.
My doctor told me after everything was over that 3-4 weeks later i would be dead without help. My heart has no damage and only 2 little 30% spots are left. As long as i live a normal life and i don't want to run marathon i wont have problems in the future. The little strange ECK line is also normal now =)
I hope that my english didn't distract you at all, i want to show that even not normal signals of a heart attack can be a sign of much bigger problems coming up.