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Heart Attack Symptoms in Women – Recognition, Response & Life-Saving Steps

heart attack symptoms in women

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  • About
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Sharon McCulloch
Sharon McCulloch
CEO, Founder and First Aid Trainer at FirstAidPro
Sharon McCulloch is the CEO and Founder of FirstAidPro, Australia's leading Registered Training Organisation (31124), delivering First Aid Courses nationwide.

Sharon has 21+ years of experience as a qualified Emergency Care Nurse registered with the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (APHRA) and 12+ years as a First Aid Trainer.

She takes pride in FirstAidPro making first aid training available, comprehensive and affordable to everybody.
Sharon McCulloch
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A heart attack occurs when the blood flow to the heart muscle is suddenly blocked, causing damage that worsens with every passing minute. Understanding heart attack symptoms in women is vital because women often experience warning signs that differ from men, meaning symptoms of a heart attack can be easily missed or mistaken for fatigue, stress, or indigestion. This article explains the warning signs, how to recognise early heart attack symptoms, and the essential actions that save lives.
If you want the confidence to respond to medical emergencies, enrol in a nationally recognised First Aid Pro course—your skills could save a life.

heart attack symptoms in women

Key Takeaways

  • Heart attack symptoms in women often differ from the classic “crushing chest pain” commonly portrayed in men.
  • Women may experience shortness of breath, nausea, jaw or back pain, unexplained fatigue, or general discomfort that can come and go.
  • Recognising early warning signs of heart attack symptoms and calling Triple Zero (000) immediately is the most effective action to save a life.
  • Women are more likely to experience subtle or atypical symptoms, increasing the risk of delayed treatment.
  • Understanding the signs of a heart attack in women can significantly improve detection, response, and long-term health outcomes.

What Is a Heart Attack?

A heart attack (myocardial infarction) happens when one of the coronary arteries becomes blocked, reducing the blood supply to the heart muscle. Without immediate treatment, the heart muscle is damaged by lack of oxygen and weakened blood flow. A heart attack is a medical emergency that can progress into cardiac arrest if not treated urgently.

Heart Attack vs Cardiac Arrest

Condition

What Happens

Key Feature

Your Response

Heart Attack

Blood flow to the heart muscle is blocked

Person is usually awake but unwell

Call Triple Zero (000), monitor closely, follow first aid

Cardiac Arrest

The heart stops pumping completely

Person is unresponsive, not breathing normally

Start CPR immediately and use an AED

Both conditions are life-threatening, and every second counts.

heart attack symptoms in women and men

Heart Attack Symptoms in Women – What Makes Them Different?

While chest pain is still a common heart attack symptom in women, many women experience less typical signs of a heart attack. These may be subtle, fluctuate, or present as general discomfort rather than obvious pain.

Women may dismiss heart attack symptoms, push through fatigue, or assume their discomfort is unrelated to the heart. This delay contributes to more severe heart damage and poorer outcomes. Recognising heart attack symptoms in women early is essential.

Chest Pain or Chest Pressure

Chest pain is a common heart attack symptom, but women often describe it as:

  • tightness
  • uncomfortable pressure
  • fullness rather than sharp pain

It may come and go or feel more like heaviness than sharp discomfort.

Shortness of Breath and Difficulty Breathing

Shortness of breath can appear with or without chest pain.
Women may feel:

  • unable to take a full breath
  • breathless after minimal activity
  • sudden difficulty breathing while resting

This is a major warning sign of a heart attack.

heart attack symptoms in women - shoulder pain

Jaw, Neck, Shoulder and Back Pain

Women frequently report radiating pain, including:

  • jaw discomfort
  • neck tightness
  • deep upper back pain
  • discomfort in one or both shoulders

These symptoms occur because the nerves supplying the heart also supply nearby regions.

Nausea, Indigestion and Stomach Pain

Indigestion-like symptoms are commonly misinterpreted.
Women experiencing a heart attack often feel:

  • nausea
  • vomiting
  • stomach cramps
  • pressure high in the abdomen

Dizziness, Light-headedness and Sudden Weakness

Reduced blood flow to the heart muscle can trigger dizziness, sudden weakness, or an almost fainting sensation.

women vs men heart attack symptoms

Early Warning Signs: Pre– Heart Attack Symptoms in Women

Some women experience symptoms days or weeks before a major cardiac event. These early warning signs of a heart attack are important to recognise.

Unexplained or Extreme Fatigue

A significant percentage of women report fatigue that seems out of proportion to their daily activity.
This can occur even when resting.

Persistent Sleep Disturbances

Difficulty sleeping, waking with shortness of breath, or unexplained night-time discomfort may indicate strain on your heart.

Anxiety, Unease or a Sense Something Is Wrong

Some women report a persistent internal warning that something feels “off”.
While not always cardiac, it is a sign worth discussing with a GP.

How Heart Attack Symptoms in Women Differ From Men’s

Although women and men share many symptoms of a heart attack, women are more likely to experience atypical signs.

Simple Comparison Table

Symptom

Men

Women

Chest pain

Common, central, crushing

Present but often less intense or diffuse

Shortness of breath

Common

Very common; may be first symptom

Upper body pain

Often left arm

Jaw, back, shoulders, arms

Nausea

Less common

More common

Fatigue

Less reported

Highly reported before attack

Women also have a higher risk of “silent” heart attacks, where symptoms are so mild that they go unnoticed.

What To Do if You Suspect a Heart Attack – Call Triple Zero

If someone is experiencing signs of a heart attack, act immediately.
Do not wait to see if symptoms improve.

Call Triple Zero (000) Immediately

Emergency services can begin lifesaving treatment en route.
Early medical care reduces heart muscle damage.

Keep the Person Resting

Help them sit comfortably, usually upright, and keep them calm. This reduces strain on the heart.

Ask About Aspirin

Emergency medical staff may advise the person to take aspirin. Do not give aspirin unless directed by a health professional.

Prepare for Cardiac Arrest

If the person becomes unresponsive or stops breathing normally, start CPR immediately and use an AED if available.
If you have never learnt CPR or want to refresh your skills, enrol in a First Aid Pro CPR course to learn how to save a life.

Why Women Delay Seeking Help

Delayed treatment during a heart attack can lead to greater heart damage and poorer recovery.

Reason 1
Misinterpreting heart attack symptoms as stress, tiredness, or simply “overdoing it”.
Reason 2
Putting caring responsibilities first and delaying care for their own heart health.
Reason 3
Reluctance to “make a fuss”, worry others, or “waste” health services’ time.
Reason 4
Assuming heart disease mainly affects men, so symptoms are not recognised as cardiac.
Critical Impact: Every delay increases damage to the heart muscle and can reduce recovery potential. If you suspect a heart attack, call Triple Zero (000) immediately.

Risk Factors for Heart Attack in Women

Several medical, lifestyle, and hormonal factors increase a woman’s likelihood of experiencing a heart attack.

Medical Conditions
Conditions that commonly increase heart attack risk include:
  • High blood pressure
  • High cholesterol
  • Diabetes
  • Obesity
These issues affect blood flow, artery health, and increase strain on your heart.
Lifestyle Factors
Smoking, chronic stress, low physical activity, and a poor diet significantly increase the risk of heart disease and heart attack in women.
Hormonal Influences
After menopause, oestrogen levels drop, reducing natural heart protection and increasing cardiovascular risk.
Important: Understanding your risk factors helps you recognise early warning signs and take steps to protect your heart health.
heart attack diagram

How a Heart Attack Happens

A heart attack occurs when blood flow to the heart muscle is suddenly blocked, causing rapid and sometimes permanent damage.

Blockage Cause 1
Fatty plaque build-up (atherosclerosis) narrows the coronary arteries, restricting blood flow.
Blockage Cause 2
A blood clot can suddenly form and completely block a coronary artery.
Blockage Cause 3
A ruptured artery plaque exposes the artery lining, triggering sudden clot formation.
Critical Impact: When blood flow to the heart muscle is blocked, tissue damage begins within minutes. Without urgent treatment, the risk of cardiac arrest increases sharply.

Prevent a Heart Attack – Heart Health Strategies

Improving heart health helps prevent a heart attack and reduces long-term cardiovascular risk.

Regular Heart Health Checks

Speak to your GP for a Heart Health Check to review blood pressure, cholesterol levels, blood sugar and cholesterol levels, family history, and lifestyle risks.

Healthy Lifestyle Choices

  • Maintain regular physical activity
  • Follow a heart-healthy diet
  • Reduce stress
  • Quit smoking

Small changes can significantly increase your chance of preventing heart disease.

Learn CPR and First Aid

Knowing how to respond to a medical emergency improves survival.
Enrol in a nationally recognised First Aid Pro course to build confidence and practical lifesaving skills.

Knowledge Test: Heart Attack Symptoms in Women

1. What is a common early warning sign of a heart attack in women?
2. If someone shows signs of a heart attack, what should you do first?
3. What symptom do women commonly experience more than men?
4. When should CPR be started?
5. Can women have a heart attack without chest pain?

Awareness Saves Lives

Understanding the symptoms and warning signs of a heart attack in women is one of the most powerful tools for preventing serious complications and death. Women often experience different symptoms of a heart attack than men, meaning early recognition is essential. By learning to identify chest pressure, shortness of breath, back or jaw pain, nausea, and unexplained fatigue, you can respond quickly and confidently.
To build practical skills that save lives, enrol in a nationally recognised first aid course with First Aid Pro and learn CPR, emergency response, and vital first aid techniques.

References

  • Symptom presentation of women with acute coronary syndromes: myth vs reality – John G Canto 1, Robert J Goldberg, Mary M Hand, Robert O Bonow, George Sopko, Carl J Pepine, Terry Long
  • Heart Foundation Australia – Heart attack symptoms and risk factors
  • Royal Australian College of General Practitioners – Cardiovascular Risks
  • National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute – Understanding myocardial infarction

Frequently Asked Questions

Can women have a heart attack without chest pain?

Yes. Many women experience subtle warning signs such as shortness of breath, nausea, jaw pain or fatigue rather than strong chest pain.

What are the most common heart attack symptoms in women?

Shortness of breath, chest discomfort and extreme fatigue are among the most common, though symptoms vary widely.

How long do heart attack symptoms last?

They may last minutes or come and go. In all cases of suspected heart attack, call Triple Zero (000) immediately.

Are younger women at risk of heart attack?

Yes. While risk increases with age, younger women can still experience heart attacks, especially if they have underlying risk factors.

Should I take aspirin during a suspected heart attack?

Only take aspirin if a health professional or emergency services instruct you to do so.

The content on this website offers general insights regarding health conditions and potential treatments. It is not intended as, and should not be construed as, medical advice. If you are facing a medical emergency, dial 000 immediately and follow the guidance provided.

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