Chest pain is when you feel pain or discomfort in the area between your neck and your belly. It can feel sharp or dull, and the pain might come and go or stay with you all the time. How the pain feels, where it’s felt, and how long it lasts depend on what’s causing it.
Chest pain symptoms depend on the cause.
Chest pain has many possible causes.
Some of the tests done to diagnose the cause of chest pain are:
Chest pain can occur due to various health or medical reasons.
Chest pain treatment depends on what’s causing the pain.
Medications: Medications for chest pain depend on its cause. Nitroglycerin is often used when chest pain comes from blocked heart arteries, usually taken under the tongue to relax the arteries and improve blood flow. Some blood pressure medicines can also widen blood vessels and help ease heart-related chest pain. Aspirin may be given when chest pain is heart-related; it doesn’t relieve pain immediately but helps prevent blood clots. During a heart attack, clot-busting drugs are used to dissolve clots blocking blood flow, while blood thinners can prevent future clots in the heart or lungs. If chest pain is caused by heartburn, acid-reducing medicines help lower stomach acid. For chest pain linked to panic attacks, doctors may recommend anti-anxiety medications along with therapies like cognitive behavioral therapy.
Angioplasty and stent placement: This procedure helps open a blocked artery going to the heart. A doctor threads a thin tube with a small balloon through a blood vessel, usually in
the groin, to the heart. The balloon is inflated to widen the artery, then removed. A tiny mesh tube called a stent is often placed to keep the artery open and improve blood flow.
Coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG): This is open-heart surgery to bypass blocked or narrowed heart arteries. The surgeon takes a vein or artery from another part of the body and uses it to create a new pathway for blood to reach the heart, increasing blood flow and improving heart function.
Emergency repair surgery: In life-threatening situations like a ruptured aorta (aortic dissection), urgent surgery is needed to repair the artery and prevent serious complications.
Lung reinflation: If a lung collapses, a doctor may insert a tube into the chest to help reinflate the lung and restore normal breathing.