A heart attack (myocardial infarction) occurs when blood flow to the heart muscle is blocked. Blockage can occur from blood clots in the arteries, arterial spasm, or a severe disturbance to the heart rhythm. This blockage can produce injury or death of heart muscle tissue. Men are affected more than women, and it occurs more often after 40 years of age. An individual's risk of heart attack increases with smoking, high blood pressure, lack of exercise, diabetes, obesity, stress, a family history of coronary artery disease, high LDL (bad cholesterol) or low HDL (good cholesterol). If you have symptoms of a heart attack, CALL 1061 or seek emergency medical treatment! Delaying or avoiding treatment increases your risk of dying!. Symptoms may include:
WHAT YOUR DOCTOR CAN DO:
• Order medicine to dissolve clot. This may be very effective, but only if used in the first few hours after a heart attack occurs WHAT YOU CAN DO: During recovery and to help prevent another heart attack:
• Work with your doctor and health care team to identify and change other harmful behaviors that could contribute to another heart attack, such as poor nutrition or poor control over blood pressure or diabetes.
• Recovering after a heart attack depends on several factors, but generally takes 4-8 weeks. Contact your doctor during recovery if: • You have chest pain that your medication does not relieve.
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