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How Heart Disease Can Strike Young Mothers

Most people think of heart disease as something that only happens in old age. That鈥檚 not always the case. But younger people may not recognize symptoms of a cardiac emergency because they don鈥檛 think it could happen to them.

鈥淚 had no clue what was going on because I have never been sick before,鈥 Elizabeth Corley recalls. 鈥淚'm always very healthy. So to think I was having a heart attack like would have never crossed my mind.鈥

Corley鈥檚 heart attack hit less than two weeks after she gave birth to her third child, Katherine. It was a rare type called a spontaneous coronary artery dissection.

At 36, Corley didn鈥檛 consider a heart attack a possibility. She had chest pain and pain in her left arm but didn鈥檛 think it was serious.

鈥淚 just kind of brushed that off,鈥 she says. Had she been home alone, she admitted she probably wouldn鈥檛 have gone to the hospital.

Her husband insisted on calling 911, and Corley was rushed to the ER.

She was stunned when doctors told her what was wrong. 鈥淚 was like, 鈥極h my gosh, what are you talking about, open heart surgery?鈥 and they're like, 'Yes!' I just could not believe it. You know, I've never heard of a spontaneous coronary artery dissection."

Corleyspoke recently about her experience at the Prairie Heart Institute in Carbondale, Ill., where she was initially treated.

Dr. Cesar Coello of the institute says this type of heart problem often hits young mothers. "After the pregnancy and delivery seems to be a time when these things happen more often. And we don鈥檛 understand exactly the reason that the lining of the arteries suddenly detach or tear."

Ignoring symptoms of heart disease is common with younger patients, says Dr. Raeed Al-Dallow of the institute.

鈥淭he popular belief is heart disease is something that affects older people,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here is a lot of truth to that. Now, being young does not protect us from heart disease at all.鈥

Up to 10 percent of all heart attacks occur in patients younger than 45. Cardiac issues can be triggered by diseases like lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. or by radiation and chemotherapy treatments for childhood cancer. And the federal government estimates that 1.4 million adults are living with congenital heart disease.

Al-Dallow says younger people, like Corley, often assume symptoms are related to something else and don鈥檛 get them checked out.

"Discomfort in the chest. This often in younger individuals is interpreted as GI symptoms. So, I have acid reflux, so you know, how can I tell those should not be ignored?" Al-Dallow says, as an example.

For Al-Dallow, education is critical in making sure younger people take cardiac symptoms seriously. He says anyone worried about how they鈥檙e feeling can ask their doctor to be tested to rule out heart issues.

"In general, echocardiograms and treadmill stress echocardiograms are considered benign tests because they are based on ultrasound, they do not involve any radiation, they are not invasive,"  he says. "And they are reasonable things to ask for.鈥

Most importantly, Al-Dallow says young people should never assume they鈥檙e safe from heart disease. That鈥檚 partly why Corley decided to share her story recently. She wanted to help other women who might be tempted to brush off symptoms because they鈥檙e busy caring for a new baby.

鈥淚f you have any kind of shortness of breath or pain in your chest or your left arm or down your neck, you know, go get checked out, because it could very well be. I never would have thought this would have happened to me and it did,鈥 she says.

More information on heart disease can be found at the .

This story was produced by, a news collaborative covering public health.

Copyright 2021 Side Effects Public Media. To see more, visit .

Dr. Cesar Coello is a cardiologist at Praire Heart Institute.
Steph Whiteside/Side Effects Public Media /
Dr. Cesar Coello is a cardiologist at Praire Heart Institute.
Elizabeth Corely recieves a plant from hospital staff who cared for her during her heart attack.
Steph Whiteside/Side Effects Public Media /
Elizabeth Corely recieves a plant from hospital staff who cared for her during her heart attack.
Dr. Raeed Al-Dallow of the Prairie Heart Institute.
Prairie Heart Institute /
Dr. Raeed Al-Dallow of the Prairie Heart Institute.

Steph Whiteside is a health and environment reporter with WSIU radio in Carbondale, Ill. She previously worked as a general reporter at AJ+ and Current TV. In her free time, she likes to knit and try to relive the 鈥90s through music.