When it comes to chest pain, all thoughts go to heart pain and heart attack and heart attack (a type of tissue necrosis or death caused by obstruction in the bloodstream). What you will read:
what you will read next :
What causes chest pain?
We need to know that chest pain has many non-cardiac causes. In this article, we will introduce you to the different causes of chest pain.
- Chest pain of cardiac origin
- Chest pain of gastrointestinal origin
- Chest pain of pulmonary origin
- Chest pain of neuromuscular origin
- Chest pain due to skin infections
- Chest pain of cardiac origin:
Ischemic heart disease
Coronary artery disease
Myocardial infarction (chest pain in this case is called angina pectoris.)
Myocarditis
Pericarditis
Mitral prolapse
Ayurvedic dissection
Vascular dissection
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- Chest pain of gastrointestinal origin:
Gastroesophageal reflux disease
Blowing
Ulcer gastria
Small bowel ulcer (duodenal ulcer)
Gallbladder diseases
Pancreatitis
- Chest pain of pulmonary origin:
Pulmonary hypertension
Pneumonia
Lung abscess
Pulmonary embolism
Pneumothorax
Plorite
Asthma
Viral and bacterial infections
- Chest pain of neuromuscular origin:
Gear fracture
Gear Impact
Inflammation of the rib cartilage (costochondritis)
Chest muscle strain
- Chest pain due to skin infections:
Zona
Panic attack
The characteristics of chest pain and associated symptoms are quite different in each of the above.
How do we know what is causing our chest pain?
Your doctor will determine the cause of your chest pain by taking a detailed history and examining you
Pain caused by ischemic heart disease is burning
stabbing
pressing in nature. This pain is felt from the top of the navel to the lower jaw. Sometimes the patient only feels heaviness in the chest. When a heart attack occurs
it takes fifteen to twenty minutes
So if you have been in pain for a few days to a few weeks, the chances of cardiovascular disease do not go away. It is important to know that tingling pain is often not due to coronary artery disease. If the shooting and tingling of the heart worsens with a change in the patient’s position or breathing, it may rarely be related to ischemic heart disease or stroke.