In 1993 at the age of 57 I had an acute and prolonged onset of pain in my chest, unlike anything I had felt before, and quite impossible to ignore, while I was attending a meeting. Doctors were reluctant to diagnose it as anything to do with my heart. Diagnosed it as a muscular spasm. Later that year in South Africa I saw a cardiologist who gave me a very thorough examination and took details of my history. He gave me an ECG and was in no doubt on reading the trace-out, that I had in fact suffered a heart attack.
I sold my squash racquet and lived life more slowly. In 1994 I was appointed to a teaching post on the Island of Jersey. Nothing more alarming happened during the next five years. I retired at 63 in 1999. Took up hill-walking. In 2002 during a Sunday walk near Worcester I felt a painful pulling sensation on the one side of my lower jaw. Decided it was either tooth ache or ear-ache. Have since ben told it was an ominous indication of a coronary problem.
Two nights later I woke to feel a crushing sensation, as though a wall had fallen on my chest. Tried my GTN spray with no noticeable effect. Phoned Evesham Hospital and was collected by ambulance around midnight, and admitted to Worcester hospital. I was confined to bed for the initial few days and recovered sufficiently to walk about and chat to others. After a week I was discharged and stayed with friends in Stratford-upon-Avon. The next night I again felt the crushing sensation in my chest. I was collected at around midnight and taken by ambulance to Warwick hospital. There was now no doubt that I was suffering from a coronary obstruction.
I was sent to Walsgrave hospital in Coventry, given an angiogram and entered on the waiting list for a triple coronary bypass graft. I had the operation in May 2002 and except for a TIA in April 2003 (after a day in the Cape mountains with athletic friends) I have been well and able to enjoy moderately strenuous activities until quite recently when, with the onset of later years, I have found long walks at a sustained good pace less enjoyable.
I have had 17 years of fulfilled intellectual and physical life since the coronary bypass. My enthusiastic gratitude to the surgeon who performed the operation is undimmed. All blood tests that are regularly checked from me show minimal cholesterol and no cause for concern. I am on a statin, a blood-pressure control tablet (olmesartan), an anticoagulant (apixaban). My pulse rate is slow, ranging from 51-60 beats per minute at rest. So beta-blockers aren't for me. I do keep my GTN spray handy. I have learned to be aware of what my body is telling me about tiredness, and to pace myself sensibly.
I am still puzzled about why the UK doctors seemed so reluctant to suspect that I was suffering from angina and a coronary and heart problem in 1993. Perhaps mine was an a-typical presentation. Even after the troponin enzyme was identified in my blood sample, one hospital GP assured me that any heart problem was very unlikely.
My recommendation to anyone who is surprised by intense chest pain is to rest comfortably, relax and inhale and exhale deeply, slowly and regularly. I found that this deep slow breathing reduced the pain. Always carry a GTN spray if you have been prescribed one.