A heavy, squeezing, or burning sensation appears in the center of your chest during brisk walking, emotional stress, or even after a meal. It might ease when you rest but returns with effort. This is often angina—your heart muscle temporarily receiving less blood than it needs. According to Mayo Clinic experts, recurring chest discomfort that comes and goes can signal blocked arteries weeks before a more serious event.
What makes this tricky? The feeling can spread to your jaw, neck, shoulders, or arms and sometimes mimics indigestion. If the discomfort is new or different from anything you’ve felt before, don’t wait to see if it “goes away on its own.”
4. New or Worsening Swelling in the Legs, Ankles, or Feet
Your shoes feel tighter by evening. Press a finger into your ankle and the dent stays for several seconds. Or you notice a sudden 3–5 pound weight gain in just a few days. This peripheral edema occurs because a weaker heart can’t push blood efficiently, causing fluid to leak into surrounding tissues. Guidelines from both the American Heart Association and Mayo Clinic highlight leg swelling as a classic marker of early heart strain.
The key detail: it’s usually worse at the end of the day and improves slightly after elevating your legs. Sudden changes like this deserve prompt attention because they can point to fluid retention linked to heart function.
5. Dizziness, Lightheadedness, Near-Fainting, or Irregular Heartbeats
You feel lightheaded when standing up quickly, or your heart suddenly races, flutters, or skips beats. These episodes may last only seconds but happen more often than before. Poor blood flow or electrical misfires in the heart can trigger them. The American Heart Association includes palpitations and dizziness among important pre-event signals, occurring in about 40% of cases.
Even brief dizzy spells or a “fluttering” sensation in your chest can be your heart’s way of waving a red flag. Never brush them off as simple dehydration if they’re new.
