I have experienced this squeezing pain in both my arms several times, like the blood pressure cuff was left on too long. It first started in spring 2017. I felt it most days, on the pain scale I'd say about a 2 or 3 out of 10. Then one day in May it got real bad. I'd say 9/10 for sure. It took an hour to go away. Then a couple years later I had it bad again, but it lasted a few hours this time. I have had random bouts of the pain, sometimes in one arm, sometimes in the other, sometimes both. I haven't had it quite as bad as those first two times though. Once I even went to get bloodwork as the pain was happening, and they found nothing. In the past couple weeks I found out I have a patent foramen ovale, a hole in the heart that is common in 20-25% of people. I am now questioning whether or not my heart could play a role in this mysterious pain. I also have very low blood pressure all the time. I know some people have mentioned that their doctors say its not heart related, but as a registered nurse I know that physicians make mistakes and really overlook things sometimes, so I would always suggest a second or third opinion.
I've had this from the elbows down at the same time. Sometimes light headed. Have had about 3-4 months apart & now twice in a week. Lasts 2-3 minutes each time. Scary as heck. Dr. said not heart. Low calcium? but I take it so??
I have had that squeezing feeling in both arms, several times. Last one was three days ago. A few hours prior to that I had trouble staying upright for a few minutes. Just went to the doctor who has no idea what it may be. I think maybe it was stress as my cat has just gone through an operation and I had been very worried.
Thanks So much for your input! I've done some more research and it seems that this can be related to back or neck problems.My Cardiologists confirms it is not heart related. I plan to go ahead with the second part of the vaccine. Just lucky I guess that all this happened just after I got the vaccine! Oh the Perils of POTS People!!! *LOL*
Never heard of it. Sorry I can't be of more help. I would confer with your family physician and as long as they don't think it's something to be concerned about, go ahead with the final part of the vaccine and assume it's just a benign sensory reaction to the vaccine. Different people's bodies just react differently and it may be a quirk of how your body handles the vaccine or some component of it. So long as it's benign, (which it likely is if not accompanied by dramatic changes in heart rate, blood pressure, respiration, or symptoms like rash, vomiting, diarrhea, alterations in consciousness, etc.), and the doctor gives the green light, I'd go ahead with the second part.