Understanding angina pectoris

If you feel this form of chest pain regularly, it may be a symptom of heart disease.

A woman experiences chest pain. The clinical term for chest pain is angina pectoris.

Updated on September 23, 2024.

Angina pectoris is temporary pain or discomfort in the chest that occurs when not enough oxygen-carrying blood reaches your heart muscle. The term "angina" means pain, while "pectoris" refers to the chest.

Angina symptoms vary. Sometimes it feels like heartburn, similar to what you may feel after eating a heavy meal. If you feel this pain regularly, it may be a symptom of heart disease.

What causes angina?

Angina is most often a sign that you have heart disease, specifically a blockage of one or more of the main blood vessels supplying the heart muscle, known as the coronary arteries. This can include blockages in the very small arteries that branch out from the coronary arteries.

Angina is the most typical symptom of heart disease. In the United States, approximately 10 million people experience angina. An angina attack occurs when the blocked vessel prevents adequate blood flow or when there is a spasm of the vessel, which can lead to decreased blood flow to the heart muscle. Spasm often occurs at rest and typically happens overnight.

Does angina cause or worsen a heart condition?

Usually, angina does not cause any heart damage. Angina is more like a warning signal and it can mean you're at greater risk of having a heart attack. Whether you're hiking uphill, having a heated argument with your partner, or digesting a five-course meal, angina is your heart's way of telling you that you're making it work too hard and that it is not getting enough blood and oxygen.

What are the symptoms of angina?

Although they vary from person to person, the typical symptoms of angina include:

  • A sharp or dull pain, tightness, pressure, squeezing, or burning sensation in the chest
  • Pain in your arms, neck, jaw, shoulder, or back, accompanying chest discomfort (these symptoms often occur during physical exertion, emotional stress, or eating)
  • Tingling, aching, or numbness in the elbows, arms, or wrists (especially your left arm)
  • Shortness of breath
  • Perspiration (sweating)
  • Nausea
  • Fatigue
  • Anxiety
  • Dizziness

Angina symptoms in women can include feeling out of breath, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, or stabbing chest pain.

How is angina diagnosed?

Your healthcare provider (HCP) can determine if you have angina by looking at your symptoms and having you perform a stress test, which usually means walking on a treadmill.

You'll be hooked up to an electrocardiogram (EKG), which measures the electrical activity of the heart before, during, and after the stress test. Your blood pressure will also be monitored throughout. Characteristic changes occur on the EKG if heart disease is present.

But because a stress test is meant for screening, you may need other tests, such as a nuclear scan or an angiogram. A nuclear scan uses radioactive materials to allow a special camera to see structures inside your body. In an angiogram, a dye is injected into your blood and an X-ray is taken of the heart and its blood vessels.

How is angina treated?

The usual medication for an attack of angina is nitroglycerin placed under the tongue. It helps dilate (widen) blood vessels so more blood can reach the heart. Nitroglycerin is also available in pill or patch form to prevent symptoms. Anyone taking nitroglycerin should avoid using medications for erectile dysfunction, because a serious drop in blood pressure could result.

After you've undergone a full evaluation, your HCP may prescribe other medications, such as beta blockers and calcium channel blockers, which can help prevent angina as well. Your HCP may also want you to take aspirin regularly, which reduces the ability of blood to clot. This allows blood to flow more easily through narrowed arteries.

You may also benefit from learning stress-reduction techniques such as meditation or relaxation exercises. Check your local community center for classes or workshop listings or explore online options.

What should I do if I'm having an angina attack?

Most people who have been diagnosed with angina are prescribed nitroglycerin tablets. You should always have them with you or nearby. Keep them in several places at home and work.

If you are experiencing an episode of angina, sit down and rest (if you're not already sitting) and put one tablet under your tongue to dissolve. Nitroglycerin can cause dizziness, so it's important to take it sitting down and to get up slowly once you feel better.

The American Heart Association recommends taking one nitroglycerin tablet. If the pain has not improved or has worsened after five minutes, call 911 immediately for an ambulance in case you are having a heart attack. Once you are in contact with emergency services, you may be instructed to repeat the dose of nitroglycerin up to two more times in five-minute intervals.

How do I know whether I'm experiencing angina or a heart attack?

It's easy to mistake an angina attack for a heart attack. They both tend to start with chest pain. Both can be marked by pain, numbness or tingling in the neck, shoulders, arms, and jaw. The difference is that with the most common form of angina, rest and medication relieve the symptoms in two or three minutes.

If you are having a heart attack, the pain will not go away and it may become more intense. Although angina can cause chest pain and discomfort, heart attack pain is generally more severe.

Women often experience heart attacks differently than men and may have symptoms unrelated to chest pain such as shortness of breath, nausea, sweating, dizziness, or unusual fatigue. If you ever feel these symptoms or what could be described as "an elephant sitting on your chest," call 911—these are signs of a heart attack.

Does medication always help ease an angina attack?

Medication helps if you have stable angina, the most common sort. But if you've been diagnosed with unstable angina, symptoms are different than your usual pattern of angina and might signal a heart attack. Medication often doesn't help resolve unstable angina.

Unstable angina usually lasts longer than a few minutes and often occurs when you're not exerting yourself. If you have unstable angina, you need to discuss with your HCP how to monitor your condition and when you should consider symptoms an emergency.

Knowing the pattern of your angina attacks should help you identify a true emergency, especially if there are changes in duration, cause, or intensity.

If I have angina, how should I take care of myself?

Your HCP will advise you on how much you can do based on the results of your tests. A supervised exercise program for heart patients can be extremely helpful, but you may need to modify your activities so you don't overtax yourself.

If a big, rich meal sets off an angina attack, try smaller portions. If walking quickly causes symptoms, slow your pace. In very cold or windy weather, you'll probably have to bundle up and cover your head and face. Your HCP may even tell you to put a nitroglycerin tablet under your tongue before stepping outside. And if you've had a heart attack already, your HCP may prescribe a low dose of aspirin every day to prevent another one.

If you have heart trouble, you'll be healthier if you follow these guidelines:

  • Control high blood pressure, diabetes, and high cholesterol levels.
  • Maintain a low-fat, low-sodium diet.
  • If you smoke, quit.
  • Reduce or stop your alcohol consumption.
  • If you're overweight, try to drop a few pounds.
  • Exercise for 30 minutes at least 5 days a week, unless your HCP forbids it.

Heart disease is generally treated with medication. In some cases, however, people have successfully reversed heart disease by making lifestyle changes including exercising and following a strict, plant-based, low-fat diet recommended by their HCP.

Article sources open article sources

National Heart, Lung, Blood Institute. “Angina.” 2010.
American Heart Association. “Angina pectoris.” 2010.
Ohio State University Medical Center. Health for Life. “Nitroglycerin Sublingual.”
American Heart Association. “Heart Attack and Angina Statistics.” 2007.
“ACC/AHA Guidelines for the Management of Patients with ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction-Executive Summary.” ACC/AHA Practice Guidelines. Circulation. 2004;110:588-636 Accessed 21 Nov 2008.
Mayo Clinic. “Heart disease in women: Understand symptoms and risk factors.” January 2009.
Mayo Clinic. “Angina.” June 2009.
American Academy of Family Physicians. “Angina and Heart Disease.” November 2006.

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