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877-CENTEGRA

/

CENTEGRA.ORG

A

s serious as a heart attack.

It’s what we say when we really

mean business. Unfortunately, too many

people fail to take an actual heart attack as

seriously as they should.

That can be deadly. About half of the

people who die from a heart attack do so

within an hour of their first symptoms—and

before they reach the hospital.*

That’s one big reason it’s critical to call

911 at the first sign of a heart attack, says

Joe Keenan, DO, director of emergency

services for Centegra Health System.

“If it’s a new or unusual pain, or if you

have sweating or nausea or shortness of

breath with chest pain, don’t wait,” he says.

“Call for help.”

THE LIFESAVING DIFFERENCE

Many people try to get to the hospital on

their own. But an ambulance is faster and

safer, Dr. Keenan says.

If your heart develops a dangerous

rhythm or stops beating on the way,

paramedics and emergency medical

technicians can act at once.

They will alert Centegra when they

suspect you’re having a heart attack. That

way, doctors and staff are ready to act the

moment you come through the door.

STAYING A STEP AHEAD

Getting to the hospital swiftly and safely

is just the first step. Then the main goal is

to limit damage by quickly restoring blood

Too patient? Why people wait to call 911

Denial. Experts say it’s one of the biggest reasons people with chest pain or other

heart attack symptoms fail to call 911.

“No one believes this could happen to them,” says cardiologist Douglas

Tomasian, MD. “People will say, ‘I’ve never had a symptom related to my heart, and

I’ve been active and well.’”

“People hate to cry wolf,” says Joe Keenan, DO, emergency services director for

Centegra Health System. They may not want to cause a fuss or inconvenience others

if it’s only indigestion.

But don’t worry about that, both doctors say.

“We’re always happy to find something more benign,” Dr. Tomasian says. And if it

is a heart attack, getting treatment fast can be the difference between life and death.

waiting game

flow to the heart muscle, says cardiologist

Douglas Tomasian, MD.

After the emergency department, most

patients with heart attacks go to Centegra

Hospital–McHenry’s cardiac catheterization

lab. There, a specialist inserts a tiny balloon

into the affected blood vessel and inflates it

to clear the blockage.

Nationally, the average time from

arrival at a hospital to an opened artery

is 60 minutes. At Centegra, door-to-balloon

times routinely beat that mark. Sometimes

they’re as low as 24 minutes.

“We have outstanding treatments,”

Dr. Tomasian says. “But it’s critically

important to get attention immediately.”

*National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

DID YOU KNOW?

Centegra Hospital–Huntleywill

have a full cardiac catheterization

laboratory the day it opens its doors

in late summer 2016.

Do you know the symptoms of a heart attack?

Not sure? Watch a quick refresher here:

gethealthy.centegra.org

.

Staying a step ahead: Centegra physicians (from

left) Joe Keenan, DO, and Douglas Tomasian, MD,

provide expert heart attack care. Your job? Call 911.

Don’t

play the