After you have been diagnosed with coronary artery disease (CAD),
your doctor will need to know whether your chest pain (angina) is
stable or unstable. If you have unstable angina, you are more likely to have a
heart attack and will therefore need more aggressive treatment.
What is angina?
Angina is chest pain or discomfort that happens because not enough
blood is getting to your heart muscle. This lack of blood flow to your heart is
often caused by the buildup of plaque in your coronary arteries, which narrows
your arteries and limits blood flow.
What is stable angina?
When the plaque in your arteries is stable and not changing, it can
cause angina if it obstructs blood flow when you exert yourself in certain
predictable ways (such as when you walk up three flights of stairs). "Stable
angina" is the term that doctors use to describe this type of predictable chest
pain or discomfort.
What is unstable angina?
The plaque in arteries may break or crack open. The body's response
is to form a blood clot over the crack in the plaque. The clot that forms may
further limit blood flow inside the artery.
This new blockage may cause angina even when you are at rest. The
clot may form, break up, and form again, causing angina that comes and goes.
"Unstable angina" is the term that doctors use to describe this type of chest
pain or discomfort that comes and goes unpredictably, even when you are at
rest, or to describe a worsening of previously stable angina into an unstable
state.
Sometimes, instead of breaking up, the clot may get larger and
completely clog up the artery, resulting in a heart attack.
How does my doctor evaluate my angina?
The best way for your doctor to tell whether your angina is stable or
unstable is to ask you questions about your symptoms. It is important to
remember that angina is not just chest pain. It can also be described as
discomfort, heaviness, or squeezing. In addition, there are other symptoms that
often go hand in hand with chest pain or discomfort, such as shortness of
breath, sweating, and a feeling of nausea. Your doctor will want you to
consider all of these symptoms when describing your angina.
Doctors typically ask five questions to find out whether someone has
stable or unstable angina:
- Have you had angina before?
- How long
does your angina last?
- Has your angina gotten more
severe?
- How often does your angina happen?
- What were
you doing when you experienced angina?
The table below shows how your doctor distinguishes between stable
and unstable angina based on your answers to these questions.
Diagnosing whether angina is stable or
unstableQuestion that your doctor asks | Answer that suggests stable
angina | Answer that suggests unstable
angina |
|---|
| Has it happened before? | I have had angina before. | This is the first time I've had angina. |
| How long does it last? | My angina usually lasts for the same amount of
time. | My angina is lasting longer. |
| Is it getting more severe? | The severity of my angina has stayed the same. | My angina is getting more severe. |
| How often does it happen? | My angina happens with consistent frequency (for
example, once per week). | My angina is happening more often (for example, once
per day instead of once per week). |
| What were you doing when it happened? | My angina happens when I'm exerting myself (such as
walking up a hill) or when I'm feeling very stressed. | My angina happens with little exertion or even when
I am resting or asleep. |
If you have had angina before, then you should think about your
experience of angina over time when answering these questions. It is very
important that you tell your doctor if your symptoms have changed because it
could mean that your CAD is getting worse, which increases your risk of a heart
attack. If this is your first experience with angina, most doctors would
consider your angina unstable. However, if this first episode of angina
occurred during a lot of exertion, it is less worrisome than if it occurred at
rest.