What’s wrong with headache and shortness of breath?

If a patient develops headache accompanied by clinical symptoms and manifestations of panic and shortness of breath, the first thing to consider is hypertensive comorbidity, for example, when the patient’s high pressure is above 180 mmHg and low pressure is above 120 mmHg, there will be clinical symptoms and reactions of dizziness, headache, nausea, panic, chest tightness, shortness of breath, and peripheral weakness, which must then be actively treated with antihypertensive treatment at the hospital. Headache, panic, chest tightness, shortness of breath and pain in the precordial region may also occur if the patient develops cardiogenic diseases, such as unstable angina pectoris from coronary artery disease, or acute myocarditis, or acute myocardial infarction, malignant arrhythmia from multiple causes, or heart failure. Finally, this clinical symptom and manifestation may also occur if the patient has cardiac neurosis caused by various factors, especially in the case of vegetative nerve dysfunction.