That statement is partly based on a real idea, but it’s often overstated on social media.
Some people do experience warning symptoms before a heart attack, sometimes days or weeks in advance. However, many others have a heart attack suddenly without clear early warning signs. So it’s not reliable to assume there will always be an obvious “early signal.”
Possible warning signs that can appear beforehand:
These may come and go and are sometimes mistaken for other issues:
- Chest discomfort (pressure, tightness, or “heaviness”)
- Unusual fatigue or weakness (especially in women)
- Shortness of breath with light activity
- Pain spreading to arm, jaw, neck, back, or stomach
- Indigestion-like symptoms, nausea, or sweating
- Feeling “off” without a clear reason
The key point (the one that actually matters):
A heart attack often happens when a coronary artery suddenly becomes blocked, and the body doesn’t always give weeks of notice. Some people have warning signs, but many do not.
So the safest approach is:
- Don’t wait for “weeks of symptoms”
- Take any new, unexplained chest pressure or shortness of breath seriously right away
If you want, I can explain the most common early warning pattern doctors actually look for or how heart attack symptoms differ between men and women.
