Originally Posted by studynerd
I am a nursing student in my second year at the University of Reno, Nevada. I have an assignment in one of my classes to join a list serve and pose a question which I then further research and write my experiences down. We are currently reading about CHF and related issues. In my readings I have noticed how women present with different signs when experiencing and MI, when compared with men. I was wondering what some of the presenting symptoms are that women are admitted with? Is is truely random and inconsistent in the way women present? Us women, we are crazy! Thanks.

Let's see: back pain, shoulder pain and jaw pain seem to be big. Epigastric pain seems to occur a lot with women, as does shortness of breath (as the only symptom).
If you are studying CHF and related issues, please make SURE you and your classmates are educated about peripartum cardiomyopathy....enlargement of the heart, reduction in EF that occurs in the last trimester of pregnancy or in the first 4-5 months postpartum. Countless women in this time period (especially postpartum) present to their ob or PCP or to the ER with signs and symptoms such as new onset of a cough (without sputum production, no recent cold or fever), orthopnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, edema, excessive fatigue, etc. and are told they have a.)asthma b.)anxiety and are turned away without being properly diagnosed. JUST because a woman just had a baby does not mean you don't need to pick up your stethoscope and listen to breath sounds.