Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
Avatar universal

stick pain near my heart

hello.. i went to the er and the doctor regarding this feeling i get the same answer.." nothings wrong i checked out ok
regarding the echo cardiogram and other test. I  have graves disease and im on 112 mcg of synthrooid. i  am 46 years
old this year and i get so worried about theses feelings..i cry because i get scared sometimes..some times my heart would race like an anxiety attack.. but i dont like that feeling or the stick feelings sometimes.Now that im not working do to a lay off i have no insurance..But my health comes first.. please give me advice as to what you think this might be?  please help me? please.. thank you


This discussion is related to chest pain, stick-in-the-chest.
1 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
367994 tn?1304953593
You are under much stress, and that can be the underlying cause for some of your symptoms as well as Graves disease. Did you have an EKG for your racing heart symptom.  It seems ER would want an EKG report; an echo indicates there is some belief you have a heart disorder, but your post only provides fast heart rate as the only symptom!  Do you have a copy of the echo report?  That may provide some information for a better understanding.
Helpful - 0
Have an Answer?

You are reading content posted in the Heart Disease Community

Top Heart Disease Answerers
159619 tn?1707018272
Salt Lake City, UT
11548417 tn?1506080564
Netherlands
Learn About Top Answerers
Didn't find the answer you were looking for?
Ask a question
Popular Resources
Is a low-fat diet really that heart healthy after all? James D. Nicolantonio, PharmD, urges us to reconsider decades-long dietary guidelines.
Can depression and anxiety cause heart disease? Get the facts in this Missouri Medicine report.
Fish oil, folic acid, vitamin C. Find out if these supplements are heart-healthy or overhyped.
Learn what happens before, during and after a heart attack occurs.
What are the pros and cons of taking fish oil for heart health? Find out in this article from Missouri Medicine.
How to lower your heart attack risk.