
goodtoknow says: Angina happens when there's a problem with one of the arteries leading to the heart. Your heart 'complains' and this causes angina pain. But having angina doesn't necessarily mean you're going to have a heart attack. Angina usually causes pain across the front of your chest, often when you're exerting yourself. Attacks usually last for up to ten minutes, longer than this and you should call a doctor. Medication and lifestyle changes, such as giving up smoking and losing weight, can alleviate the symptoms of angina and prevent the condition from getting any worse.
For a full medical explanation of the causes, symptoms and treatments of angina from patient.co.uk, read on.
Angina is caused by narrowing of the coronary (heart) arteries. Usual treatment includes a statin drug to lower your cholesterol level, low-dose aspirin to help prevent a heart attack, and a beta-blocker drug to help protect the heart. An angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor drug may be advised in some cases. Beta-blockers and other drugs are also commonly prescribed to ease and prevent angina pains. In some cases, angioplasty or surgery are options to widen, or to bypass, narrowed arteries.
Angina is a pain that comes from the heart. It is common in people over the age of 50. Sometimes it occurs in younger people. It is more common in men than women. This leaflet is about the common type of angina which is caused by narrowing in the coronary arteries of the heart. (Angina is sometimes caused by uncommon disorders of the heart valves or heart muscle.)
The heart is mainly made of special muscle. The heart pumps blood into arteries (blood vessels) which take the blood to every part of the body. Like any other muscle, the heart muscle needs a good blood supply. The coronary arteries take blood to the heart muscle. The coronary arteries are the first arteries to branch off the aorta. The aorta is the large artery that takes blood from the left ventricle of the heart to the body.
If you have angina, one or more of your coronary arteries is usually narrowed. This causes a reduced blood supply to a part or parts of your heart muscle. The blood supply may be enough when you are resting. However, your heart muscle needs more blood and oxygen when it works harder. For example, when you walk fast or climb stairs, your heart rate increases to deliver the extra blood. If the extra blood that your heart needs during exertion cannot get past the narrowed coronary arteries, the heart 'complains' with pain.
The narrowing of the arteries is caused by atheroma. Atheroma is like fatty patches or 'plaques' that develop within the inside lining of arteries. (This is similar to water pipes that get 'furred up' with scale.) Plaques of atheroma may gradually form over a number of years in one or more places in the coronary arteries. In time, these can become bigger and cause enough narrowing of one or more of the arteries to cause symptoms. (The diagram shows three narrowed sections as an example. However, atheroma can develop in any section of the coronary arteries.)
The common symptom is a pain, ache or discomfort that you feel across the front of the chest when you exert yourself. For example, when you walk up a hill. You may also, or just, feel the pain in your arms, jaw, neck or stomach. An angina pain does not usually last long. It will usually ease within 10 minutes when you rest, and often within 1-2 minutes if you take some GTN (see below). The pain may also be triggered by other causes of a faster heart rate. For example, when you have a vivid dream or an argument. The pains also tend to develop more easily after meals, or in cold winds.
Some people have non-typical pains, for example, when bending or eating. If the symptoms are not typical then it is sometimes difficult to tell the difference between angina and other causes of chest pain such as a pulled muscle in the chest, or heartburn. Some people with angina also become breathless when they exert themselves. Occasionally this is the only symptom and there is no pain.
If you have suspected angina, tests are usually advised.
Certain 'risk factors' increase the risk of more atheroma forming which can make angina worse. Briefly, risk factors that can be modified and may help to prevent angina from getting worse are:
The main aims of treatment are:
Discussed on previous page.
This comes as tablets or sprays. You take a dose under your tongue 'as required' when a pain develops. GTN is absorbed quickly into the bloodstream from under the tongue. A dose works to ease the pain within a minute or so. Many people always carry their GTN spray or tablets with them. Some people take a GTN tablet or a spray before any exercise. For example, before climbing stairs. If the first dose does not work, take a second dose after five minutes. (If the pain persists for 15 minutes despite taking GTN, then call an ambulance.)
GTN works by relaxing the blood vessels. This reduces the workload on the heart, and also helps to widen the coronary arteries and increase the flow of blood to the heart muscle.
GTN tablets 'go off' after a few weeks. Therefore, you need a fresh supply of tablets every eight weeks, and return any unused tablets to the pharmacist. You may prefer to use a GTN spray which has a longer shelf life than tablets. A dose of GTN may cause a headache and/or flushing for a short while. This side-effect often improves, or goes, with continued use.
Cholesterol is a chemical that is made in the liver from fatty foods that you eat. Cholesterol is involved in forming atheroma. As a rule, the higher the blood cholesterol level, the greater the risk of developing atheroma. However, whatever your cholesterol level, a reduction in the level is usually advised if you have angina. Statin drugs lower the blood cholesterol level by blocking an enzyme (chemical) which is needed to make cholesterol in the liver.
There are several brands of statin drugs to chose from. The aim is to reduce your cholesterol level to below 4 mmol/l or by 25% of the original level, whichever gives the greatest reduction.
Aspirin reduces the 'stickiness' of platelets. Platelets are tiny particles in the blood that help the blood to clot after cuts. If lots of platelets become stuck onto a patch of atheroma inside an artery they can form a clot (thrombosis). Therefore, taking aspirin reduces the risk of a heart attack which is caused by a blood clot forming in a coronary artery. The usual dose of aspirin is 75mg daily. This is a lot less than the dose used for pains and headaches. Side-effects are unusual with low dose aspirin. If you have a stomach or duodenal ulcer, or asthma, you may not be able to take aspirin. Options then include to take an additional drug to 'protect the gut', or to use another antiplatelet drug such as clopidogrel.
Beta-blockers 'block' the action of certain hormones such as adrenaline. These hormones increase the rate and force of the heartbeat, particularly when you exert yourself. Therefore, if you take a beta-blocker it blunts any increase in the rate and force of the heart beat, particularly when you exert yourself. Therefore less oxygen is needed by the heart, and angina pains are prevented, or occur less often. Beta-blockers are also thought to have some protective effect on the heart muscle which may reduce the risk of developing complications.
A beta-blocker (described above) may be sufficient to prevent angina pains. There are also other drugs that can be taken in addition, if required, to reduce the number and severity of angina pains. There are many drugs that can be used, but they fall into three main groups.
There are several types and brands in each group. They are all good at preventing angina pains. If the pains are not well controlled by taking one drug, then another drug can be added from another group. As the different groups of drugs work in different ways, combinations of these drugs complement each other. It is quite common to take a 'combination therapy' of two or three drugs to prevent angina pains. The possible side-effects vary between the different drugs. Therefore, if a particular drug does not suit, you may find that a different one is fine. The aim is to find a drug, or combination of drugs, that prevent your pains, but with minimal side-effects.
Note: even when taking regular medication to prevent angina pains, you can still take GTN for 'breakthrough' angina pains that may still occur from time to time.
There are several types and brands of ACE inhibitors. These drugs prevent a build up of fluid by interfering with the enzyme angiotensin (a body chemical) which is involved in regulating body fluid. ACE inhibitors also have a protective effect on the heart, and may slow down the progression of heart failure. An ACE inhibitor is usually prescribed to people with angina who are shown to have a reduced function of the left ventricle of the heart or who have had a myocardial infarction (heart attack). In these situations, there is good evidence that in such people and ACE inhibitor improves prognosis (outlook).
However, it is uncertain whether an ACE inhibitor should be taken routinely by people with angina who do not have these other heart problems. Hopefully, research will clarify this issue. In the meantime, some doctors do prescribe an ACE inhibitor to all of their patients with angina.
These treatments are an option if drugs fail to control the pains, or if the condition becomes severe with one or more coronary arteries becoming very narrow.
In most cases, angina pains come on with a certain amount of exertion, and you can predict the level of exertion that triggers a pain. This situation is called 'stable angina'. More than a million people in the UK have stable angina. It is common to have stable angina for many years. With treatment, most pains can be prevented. In time, over months or years, the pains may come on with a lesser amount of exertion.
If the pattern of your pain changes fairly suddenly, and the pains come on minimal exertion, or while you are resting, this is called 'unstable angina'. This is an emergency and needs immediate medical care.
If you have angina, you have a higher than average risk of having a heart attack (myocardial infarction). Briefly, a heart attack usually occurs when there is a sudden total blockage of a coronary artery. This is caused by a blood clot that forms over a patch of atheroma, and blocks the blood supply to a segment of heart muscle. However, your risk of having a heart attack is much reduced if you take aspirin and a statin - as discussed on previous pages.
If you have a pain that lasts longer than 15 minutes, or is different or more severe than usual, then call an ambulance immediately. It may be unstable angina or a heart attack and immediate medical care is needed.
People with angina should be immunised against the pnuemococcus, and have an annual 'flu-jab'.
British Heart Foundation 14 Fitzhardinge Street, London W1H 6DH Tel (Heart Information Line): 08450 70 80 70 Web: www.bhf.org.uk
British Cardiac Patients Association: 2 Station Road, Swavesey, Cambridgeshire, CB4 5QJ
Tel (Helpline): 01223 846845 Web: www.bcpa.co.uk
Heart patients, their families and carers may find investigations or treatments difficult to understand and hard to accept. It can be a relief to share thoughts and concerns with people who have successfully passed through similar anxieties and problems.
© EMIS and PIP 2006 Updated: October 2006 PRODIGY Validated