Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    7 Pains to never, ever ignore

    Usually a headache is just a headache, and heartburn is nothing more than a sign that you rang the Taco Bell once too often. Except when they're not.

    Pain is your body's way of telling you that something isn't quite right. More often than not, you have some idea of what's behind it. But when it comes on suddenly, lingers longer than usual, or just seems different, it calls for medical attention--and the sooner, the better. According to our experts, all of the following pain conditions should be considered red flags


    1. Chest pain
    "If patients were to become well versed in what I think of as the subtle language of the heart, many could avoid needless worry and expense," notes Arthur Agatston, MD, a preventive cardiologist. "Studies have found that women experience a wider range of heart attack symptoms than men do." In Agatston's experience, there are three good indicators that something isn't right, and they can occur in either gender. They are chest pain that doesn't go away, varied shortness of breath, and any upper body pain that hasn't occurred before. If you experience any of these symptoms, he says, you should call your doctor or 911 immediately.

    28 days to a healthier heart


    2. Severe head pain
    Chances are, it's a migraine. But if it isn't accompanied by other migraine symptoms (such as a visual aura), sudden, severe head pain can signal a brain aneurysm. "A burst aneurysm can cause brain damage within minutes, so you need to call 911 immediately," advises Elsa-Grace Giardina, MD, a cardiologist and director of the Center for Women's Health at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center.

    Experiencing headaches on the weekends? Find out what your body is telling you.

    3. A throbbing tooth
    It's likely that the tooth's nerve has become damaged, probably because the surrounding pearly white enamel is cracked or rotting away. Unless you get it patched up quickly, bacteria in your mouth can invade the nerve. And you definitely don't want that breeding colony to spread throughout your body, says Kimberly Harms, DDS, a dentist outside St. Paul, Minnesota. If your tooth is already infected, you'll require a root canal, in which the tooth's bacteria-laden pulp is removed and replaced with plastic caulking material.


    4. Sharp pain in your side
    You may just need some Beano. But if you feel as if you're being skewered in your right side, and you're also nauseated and running a fever, you could have appendicitis. For women, another possibility is an ovarian cyst. Typically these fluid-filled sacs are harmless and disappear on their own. But if one twists or ruptures, it can cause terrible pain.

    In both cases, you're looking at emergency surgery. "If you don't remove an inflamed appendix, it can burst," says Lin Chang, MD, a gastroenterologist and co-director of the Center for Neurovisceral Sciences and Women's Health at UCLA. A twisted cyst also needs to be removed right away, as it can block blood flow to the ovary within hours.


    5. Abdominal discomfort with gas or bloating
    For the past month, you've felt gassy and bloated more days than not, and it takes fewer slices of pizza to fill you up than it once did. If the symptoms are new, the worst-case scenario is ovarian cancer. In 2007, the Gynecologic Cancer Foundation released the first national consensus on early symptoms of this form of cancer: bloating, pelvic or abdominal pain, and difficulty eating. If you start experiencing them almost daily for more than two or three weeks, consider it a red flag. Schedule an appointment with your ob-gyn to discuss your symptoms.

    The 20 biggest health excuses that hold you back

    6. Back pain with tingling toes
    If you've just helped your cousin move into her new fourth-floor apartment, anti-inflammatories should banish the pain. But if they don't work, hobble to an orthopedist. "One of your discs (the spongy rings that cushion the bones in your spine) could be pressing on the spinal nerve," says Letha Griffin, MD, an orthopedist and sports medicine specialist in Atlanta. Without proper attention, you risk permanent nerve damage.

    7. Leg pain with swelling
    Your calf is extremely tender in one location, noticeably swollen, and red or warm to the touch. You might have deep-vein thrombosis (DVT), commonly known as a blood clot. Resist the urge to massage the area or to try walking off the pain. If the clot breaks free, it can travel through your veins up to your lungs and cut off your oxygen supply. Instead, see your doctor right away. He or she will do a CT scan or ultrasound to check for a DVT. If that's what you have, you'll need to take blood thinners--sometimes for up to a year--to dissolve it, says Suzanne Steinbaum, MD, director of women and heart disease for the Heart and Vascular Institute at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

    Could walking be causing your leg pain? Get tips on how to recover.


    More from Prevention

    11 Natural Feel-Good Remedies

    Worst Habits that Hurt Your Back

    13 Important Questions About Arthritis

    Stop Foot Pain for Good






    Order Prevention today and receive a FREE Trial Issue and FREE Pedometer!








    List Maker's Get Healthy Guide. Top to-Do's for a Healthier You!

     

    233 comments

    • Matilda  •  1 year 4 months ago
      When it comes to pain, it is unfortunate but many Doctors out there aren't qualified. You may as well be going to Doctor Seuss.
    • r  •  1 year 4 months ago
      I'm a 55 yr old guy. Reading these symptoms I realized I.d better call 911. I have ovarien cancer. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Never mind I just farted.
    • Saika  •  1 year 4 months ago
      aahh many heath problms are present in pakistan as an pharmacist i am worried how many drugs can a single person take when having numbr of pain?
    • JennY  •  1 year 4 months ago
      All fine and good but without medical insurance you better go to the hospital via an ambulance or forget treatment.......

      all about the almighty dollar.........
    • Donald  •  1 year 4 months ago
      Thanks to Obamacare, I no longer have health insurance. What should I do if I experience any of these symptoms?
    • Jeff  •  1 year 4 months ago
      Definatly ignor that anal pain after passing out at the party the other day.
    • damaris  •  1 year 4 months ago
      Celmare, migraines can come on extremely quickly, and can indeed come without any auras at all.
    • Gregory  •  1 year 4 months ago
      Exercise.
    • GoThMoM527  •  1 year 4 months ago
      I went to the E.R. about 3 or 4 years ago with that "sharp pain" on my side. I waited before rushing to the e.r. thinking it might be just gas and wanted to avoid the embarassment. But late night came and still in pain. The only thing they found was an ovarian cyst which the doctor did not give much importance, told me to follow up with my gynecologist and sent me home, i even had to ask for pain medication before leaving. Apparently it resolved on its own. Now im currently enrolled in a medical study for an hpv vaccine. I was referred from the free planned parenthood clinic because i have no insurance and have the hpv virus, hsil (pre-cancerous cells) CIN-2. I had those same symptoms with the abdominal pain and bloating, eating a lot less cause i have no appetite. If it wasn't for ganja i would suffer from severe malnutrition also. So yes, pay attention to what your body is telling you and don't take s#@% from doctors that make you feel like your wasting their precious time. Just because they have an m.d. doesn't mean they're allways right. Look for a second opinion.
    • keeping it positve K  •  1 year 4 months ago
      It's some how funny that many folks have left comments about not being able to afford health insurance, but yet as a country we do not want to have universal healthcare. Good old america, worry about our selves first!!!!!!
    • krejados  •  1 year 4 months ago
      Brandon B: try acupuncture for relief of your symptoms. Of course, you will still have to deal with all other organ related issues... If you are truly done having children, consider endometrial ablation. It works wonder. You get to keep all of your organs, do not have to do HRT and you do NOT have the ongoing organ related issues. Just a suggestion or two.
    • RWS  •  1 year 4 months ago
      How about adding to facial pain -------Trigeminal neuralgia ? Hmmmm?
    • You  •  1 year 4 months ago
      I used to have severe head and neck pain....

      Then I divorced her...
    • Jessie  •  1 year 4 months ago
      4. Sharp pain in your side.......One important thing to know is that with appendicitis it doesn't always burst right away. It can swell and recede giving false hope to the ER Doc treating you. After 4 visits to the ER over a 3 yr time period, the last giving me unbearable pain. It wasn't till a younger nurse (coming in on the night shift@ 11pm) switched from the ancient nurse I had had for over 4 hrs who insisted I just had the Stomach Flu, that she called my Physician and he ordered a Scan and low and behold I was in surgery a few hours later in a Hospital that I had to be transported to by ambulance!
    • Corey  •  1 year 4 months ago
      What's BS is that millions of people go in wasting healthcare professionals time, and an astonishing amount of money, for gas or a headache, when the people who need serious urgent care get dismissed because they're thought to be hypochondriac's
    • frankiquilts  •  1 year 4 months ago
      I've had ovarian cysts completely surrounding both of my ovaries for 30 years. No pain. I ovulate regularly. Ovarian cysts are not a big deal. If you have massive pain, it's from endometriosis, not cysts.
    • F.T.B!  •  1 year 4 months ago
      How about the pain in my a@@ from reading yahoo articles?
    • Buffersss  •  1 year 4 months ago
      Yeah this article is for the rich or upper middle class or the poor (those on a medical card), i'll be damned if i am going running to the emergency room everytime i have a chest pain or headache, unless i want a 1200 dollar bill for 30 minutes of work
    • valleymex  •  1 year 4 months ago
      What a bunch of BS. Every pain in this artical is followed by 'see a Doctor'. 50 million people in this once great Country do not have Health Ins. therefore cannot afford a Doctor everytime a new pain comes up. So in reality, only the rich,or people with very good Health Ins can use this infomation. I'm one of those Americans that served in the US Army and cannot afford Health Ins. I get my Medical and Health Care from the VA. And let me tell you the VA does not care for the Vets. It's the worst Health Care on this Planet. They treat you like a number, and that number is not #1.
    • Buffersss  •  1 year 4 months ago
      The problem is with this article is that if u have no health insurance and have to buy food or pay for a roof over ur head, u cant afford to get these things checked out, I know plenty of friends who pull their own teeth with a bottle of whiskey and a pair of pliers

    Join us on Pinterest

    DAILY SHOT VIDEO

    We apologize. An error has occurred. Please try again.