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  2. Unstable angina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unstable_angina

    The symptoms can last longer than those in stable angina, can be resistant to rest or medicine, and can get worse over time. [7] [8] The cardinal symptom of critically decreased blood flow to the heart is chest pain, experienced as tightness, pressure, or burning. [5]

  3. Troponin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troponin

    Both markers can be detected in patient's blood 3–6 hours after onset of the chest pain, reaching peak level within 16–30 hours. Elevated concentration of cTnI and cTnT in blood samples can be detected even 5–8 days after onset of the symptoms, making both proteins useful also for the late diagnosis of AMI. [40]

  4. What It Means When You Have Chest Pain That Comes and Goes - AOL

    www.aol.com/means-chest-pain-comes-goes...

    Symptoms include chest pain or pain that comes and goes, radiating to the jaw and either arm, fatigue, heart palpitations (myocarditis can cause heart arrhythmias), lightheadedness, shortness of ...

  5. Acute pericarditis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acute_pericarditis

    Chest pain is one of the common symptoms of acute pericarditis. It is usually of sudden onset, occurring in the anterior chest and often has a sharp quality that worsens with breathing in or coughing, due to inflammation of the pleural surface at the same time.

  6. Myocardial infarction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myocardial_infarction

    [8] [15] Commonly used blood tests include troponin and less often creatine kinase MB. [7] Treatment of an MI is time-critical. [16] Aspirin is an appropriate immediate treatment for a suspected MI. [9] Nitroglycerin or opioids may be used to help with chest pain; however, they do not improve overall outcomes.

  7. Acute coronary syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acute_coronary_syndrome

    Symptoms of the acute coronary syndromes are similar. [8] The cardinal symptom of critically decreased blood flow to the heart is chest pain, experienced as tightness, pressure, or burning. [9] Localization is most commonly around or over the chest and may radiate or be located to the arm, shoulder, neck, back, upper abdomen, or jaw. [9]

  8. Variant angina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Variant_angina

    Individuals who develop cardiac chest pain are generally treated empirically as an "acute coronary syndrome", and are immediately tested for elevations in their blood levels of enzymes such as creatine kinase isoenzymes or troponin that are markers for cardiac damage.

  9. Chest pain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chest_pain

    Key symptoms include sharp chest pain, difficulty breathing, low blood pressure in severe cases, and diminished breath sounds accompanied by dullness to percussion over the affected area. [20] Pneumothorax: Those who are at a higher risk of developing pneumothorax are tall, slim male smokers who have had underlying lung diseases such as ...