What to look for in a woman with heartburn

There are many causes of heart pain in women, the more common ones are heart disease (angina, etc.), lung disease (lung cancer, etc.), digestive disease (gastritis), breast disease (breast cancer, etc.), and diseases related to the chest wall (pleurisy, etc.), which need to be diagnosed by combining with the symptoms and relevant examinations.
1. Heart disease: especially common in elderly women, the more common are angina pectoris, myocardial infarction and other ischemic cardiomyopathies, with post-sternal, precordial pain is common, part of which can be radiated to the left side of the shoulder and the inner side of the left arm, and the onset of the attack is often associated with exercise, emotional excitement and so on.
2. Lung diseases: the more common ones are pneumonia, lung cancer, etc. When the lesion invades the left pleura, it can cause left chest pain. It is often accompanied by respiratory symptoms such as cough, sputum and fever.
3. Digestive tract diseases: the more common ones are acute and chronic gastritis, reflux esophagitis, etc., which are often accompanied by heartburn, belching (belching), nausea, etc., and can be relieved after taking medicines to inhibit gastric acid (such as omeprazole, etc.) and protect gastric mucous membrane (such as bismuth potassium citrate, etc.).
4. Breast diseases: the more common ones are breast hyperplasia and breast cancer, which can cause pain on the left side of the chest, especially breast hyperplasia, the pain is mostly regular, painful during menstruation and relieved after menstruation, and breast cancer can be detected as a lump in the mammary gland.
5. Chest wall diseases: such as pleurisy, left intercostal neuralgia, etc. In addition, it may be related to trauma, such as rib cartilage injury.
It is recommended that patients go to the hospital, complete the examination, clarify the condition, and then be given appropriate treatment by professional physicians for the condition, and the drugs need to be used under the guidance of professional physicians.