How is angina treated differently from a heart attack in an emergency?Â
In the heat of the moment, angina and a heart attack can feel terrifyingly similar. Both involve chest pain caused by a lack of oxygen to the heart muscle. However, the underlying cause differs significantly: angina is usually a temporary squeeze caused by a narrowed artery, while a heart attack is a permanent blockage caused by a blood clot. Consequently, the emergency response is different, one requires rest and medication to relax the vessel, while the other requires urgent mechanical intervention to reopen it.
What We’ll Discuss in This Article
- The fundamental difference: Narrowing vs. Blockage.
- The ‘Stop and Spray’ protocol for angina.
- Why aspirin is the first line of defence for a heart attack.
- What happens when paramedics arrive (MONA protocol).
- Primary PCI (emergency stenting) vs. Thrombolysis.
- The critical ‘Golden Hour’ for saving heart muscle.
- When to transition from ‘treating angina’ to ‘calling 999.’
How is an Angina attack treated?
An angina attack is treated by reducing the heart’s workload and widening the arteries. Because the artery is not fully blocked, the goal is to restore the balance between oxygen supply and demand. This is usually achieved by stopping physical activity immediately and using a Glyceryl Trinitrate (GTN) spray or tablet.
The Angina Protocol
- Stop: Cease whatever you are doing (walking, gardening, arguing) and sit down. Standing can cause fainting if your blood pressure drops.
- Spray: Use your GTN spray under your tongue. This medication is a vasodilator, it relaxes the blood vessels within seconds, allowing more blood to flow around the narrowing.
- Wait: The pain should subside within a few minutes. If it does, no further treatment is needed, and no permanent damage has occurred.
How is a Heart Attack treated?
A heart attack (Myocardial Infarction) is treated as a life-threatening emergency because a blood clot is physically blocking an artery. Rest and GTN spray will not clear this blockage. The priority is ‘Reperfusion’, physically reopening the artery as fast as possible to stop heart muscle from dying.
The Heart Attack Protocol
- Call 999: Speed is vital.
- Aspirin: You will be told to chew a 300mg aspirin tablet. This acts as an antiplatelet, stopping the clot from growing bigger.
- Paramedics: They will perform an ECG immediately to confirm the diagnosis and may give strong pain relief (morphine) and oxygen if levels are low.
- Hospital: You will be taken directly to a cardiac centre for surgery (Primary PCI) or given ‘clot-busting’ drugs (thrombolysis).
The Transition: When Angina becomes an Emergency
The most critical decision for a patient is knowing when ‘just angina’ has become a potential heart attack. The rule of thumb is the ‘15-Minute Rule’ or the ‘GTN Failure Rule.’
- Angina: Responds to GTN.
- Heart Attack: Does not respond to GTN.
Primary PCI vs. Thrombolysis
Once in the hospital, the gold standard treatment for a major heart attack (STEMI) is Primary PCI (Percutaneous Coronary Intervention).
- PCI (Stenting): A cardiologist inserts a catheter through the wrist or groin, passes a wire through the clot, inflates a balloon to squash the plaque, and places a metal stent to keep the artery open. This restores blood flow instantly.
- Thrombolysis: If the hospital is too far away, doctors may inject a powerful drug (thrombolytic) to dissolve the clot chemically.8 This is less common now but still used in rural areas.
Comparison Table: Emergency Response
| Feature | Angina Attack | Heart Attack (MI) |
| Pathology | Temporary narrowing | Complete blockage (Clot) |
| First Action | Stop & Rest | Call 999 |
| Medication | GTN Spray | Aspirin 300mg (Chewed) |
| Response to Meds | Pain goes away (<5 mins) | Pain persists |
| Hospital Treatment | Medication adjustment | Emergency Surgery (Stent) |
| Outcome | No permanent damage | Permanent scar (if untreated) |
Conclusion
The difference in treatment comes down to the nature of the obstruction. Angina is a warning; the heart is struggling but the pipe is open. We treat it by resting and relaxing the vessel. A heart attack is a crisis; the pipe is shut. We treat it by attacking the clot with aspirin and mechanically forcing the artery open with a stent. Knowing the ‘GTN Rule’, if two doses don’t work, call 999, is the single most important piece of knowledge for keeping yourself safe.
If you are ever in doubt whether your pain is angina or a heart attack, do not hesitate. Call 999. It is better to be checked and sent home than to ignore a life-threatening blockage.
Why should I chew the aspirin?Â
Chewing the aspirin breaks it down, allowing it to be absorbed into your bloodstream through the mouth and stomach much faster than swallowing it whole.9 In a heart attack, every minute counts.Â
Can I drive myself to the hospital?Â
No. Never drive yourself if you suspect a heart attack. You could lose consciousness behind the wheel, endangering yourself and others. Ambulance crews can start life-saving treatment (like defibrillation) on the way.Â
Does coughing help a heart attack?Â
No. The ‘cough CPR’ technique is an internet myth for the general public. It is only used in very specific, monitored situations in a catheter lab by cardiologists. It does not stop a heart attack at home.Â
What if I am alone?Â
Unlock your front door, call 999, chew an aspirin, and sit near the door on the floor (so you don’t fall if you faint). Try to stay calm to keep your heart rate low.Â
Can a panic attack feel like a heart attack?Â
Yes. Panic attacks can cause chest pain and breathlessness. However, if you have a history of heart disease, you must always assume it is the heart first until proven otherwise.Â
Why do paramedics give Morphine?Â
Morphine is a strong painkiller, but it also reduces anxiety and relaxes blood vessels, which helps reduce the strain on the heart.Â
Is oxygen always given?Â
Not anymore. Guidelines have changed. Oxygen is only given if your blood oxygen levels are actually low (hypoxia). Giving too much oxygen to a healthy-breathing patient can actually be harmful to the heart.Â
Authority Snapshot
This article was written by Dr. Rebecca Fernandez, a UK-trained physician (MBBS) with extensive experience in emergency medicine and cardiology. Having managed the ‘front door’ of the hospital for years, Dr. Fernandez has treated countless patients presenting with chest pain. She explains the critical differences in how medical teams respond to a temporary lack of blood flow (angina) versus a complete blockage (heart attack). This content has been reviewed to ensure strict alignment with NHS and NICE protocols.
