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Sternum pain causes
Causes of sternum pain can vary from minor problems, such as indigestion or stress, to serious medical emergencies, such as a heart attack or pulmonary embolism. The specific cause of sternum pain can be difficult to interpret.
Finding the cause of your sternum pain can be challenging, especially if you’ve never had prior symptoms. Even doctors may have a difficult time deciding if sternum pain is a sign of a heart attack or something less serious, such as indigestion.
If you have unexplained sternum pain lasting more than a few minutes, seek emergency medical help right away rather than trying to diagnose the cause yourself.
Get immediate medical help if you think you’re having a heart attack.
Call your local emergency services number if you have sternum pain that:
- Comes on suddenly with crushing, squeezing, tightening, or pressure in your chest.
- Pain spreads (radiates) to your arms or left arm, between your shoulder blades, back, neck or jaw
- Makes your chest feel tight or heavy
- Also started with shortness of breath, sweating and feeling or being sick
- Lasts more than 15 minutes
- You have nausea, dizziness, sweating, a racing heart, or shortness of breath.
- You know you have angina and your chest discomfort is suddenly more intense, brought on by lighter activity, or lasts longer than usual.
- Your angina symptoms occur while you are at rest.
- You have sudden, sharp chest pain with shortness of breath, especially after a long trip, a stretch of bedrest (for example, following an operation), or other lack of movement, especially if one leg is swollen or more swollen than the other (this could be a blood clot, part of which has moved to the lungs).
- You have been diagnosed with a serious condition, such as heart attack or pulmonary embolism.
You could be having a heart attack. Call your local emergency services number immediately as you need immediate treatment in hospital.
Your risk of having a heart attack is greater if:
- You have a family history of heart disease.
- You smoke, use cocaine, or are overweight.
- You have high cholesterol, high blood pressure, or diabetes.
- You already have heart disease.
See a doctor or go to your local walk-in medical clinic if:
- You have sternum pain that comes and goes
- You have sternum pain that goes away quickly but you’re still worried
- You have a fever or a cough that produces yellow-green phlegm.
- You have sternum pain that is severe and does not go away.
- You are having problems swallowing.
- Sternum pain lasts longer than 3 to 5 days.
It’s important to get medical advice to make sure it’s nothing serious.
Common causes of sternum pain
Sternum pain has many different causes – only the most common are listed below. In most cases, sternum pain is not caused by a heart problem.
Your symptoms might give you an idea of the cause. Don’t self-diagnose – see your doctor if you’re worried.
Sternum pain symptoms | Possible cause |
---|---|
Starts after eating, bringing up food or bitter tasting fluids, feeling full and bloated | heartburn or indigestion |
Starts after chest injury or chest exercise, feels better when resting the muscle | chest sprain or strain |
Triggered by worries or a stressful situation, heartbeat gets faster, sweating, dizziness | anxiety or panic attack |
Gets worse when you breathe in and out, coughing up yellow or green mucus, high temperature | chest infection or pneumonia |
Tingling feeling on skin, skin rash appears that turns into blisters | shingles |
Sternum pain and heart problems
The most common heart problems that cause sternum pain include:
- pericarditis – which usually causes a sudden, sharp, stabbing pain that gets worse when you breathe deeply or lie down
- angina or a heart attack – which have similar symptoms but a heart attack is life-threatening
You’re more likely to have heart problems if you’re older or know you’re at risk of coronary heart disease.
For example, if you:
- smoke
- are very overweight (obese)
- have high blood pressure, diabetes or high cholesterol
- have a history of heart attacks or angina in family members under 60 years old
Heart attack
A heart attack occurs when an artery that supplies oxygen to your heart muscle becomes blocked. A heart attack may cause chest pain that lasts a few minutes or longer, or it can also be silent and produce no signs or symptoms.
Many people who experience a heart attack have warning signs hours, days or weeks in advance. The earliest warning sign of blocked heart arteries may be ongoing episodes of sternum pain that start when you’re physically active and are relieved by rest. However, during a heart attack those symptoms appear even without any physical activity.
Someone having a heart attack may experience none, any or all of the following:
- Uncomfortable pressure, fullness or squeezing pain in the center of the chest lasting more than a few minutes
- Pain spreading to the shoulders, back, neck, jaw or arms
- Lightheadedness, fainting, cold sweating, nausea or shortness of breath
If you or someone else may be having a heart attack:
- Call your local emergency services number or get emergency medical assistance. Don’t tough out the symptoms of a heart attack. If you don’t have access to emergency medical services, have a neighbor or friend drive you to the nearest hospital. Drive yourself only as a last resort, and realize that driving yourself puts you and others at risk if your condition suddenly worsens.
- Chew a regular-strength aspirin. Aspirin reduces blood clotting, which can help blood flow through a narrowed artery that’s caused a heart attack. However, don’t take aspirin if you are allergic to aspirin, have bleeding problems or take another blood-thinning medication, or if your doctor previously told you not to do so.
- Take nitroglycerin, if prescribed. If you think you’re having a heart attack and your doctor has previously prescribed nitroglycerin for you, take it as directed. Don’t take anyone else’s nitroglycerin.
- Begin CPR on the person having a heart attack, if directed. If the person suspected of having a heart attack is unconscious, a 911 dispatcher or another emergency medical specialist may advise you to begin cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). If you haven’t received CPR training, doctors recommend performing only chest compressions (about 100 to 120 compressions a minute). The dispatcher can instruct you in the proper procedures until help arrives.
- If an automated external defibrillator (AED) is immediately available and the person is unconscious, follow the device instructions for using it.
Angina
Angina is sternum pain or discomfort caused by reduced blood flow to your heart muscle. The term angina is generally used when you’ve already been given the diagnosis of heart disease.
Angina is referred to as stable or unstable. Stable angina can be persistent, recurring sternum pain that usually occurs with exertion and is relatively predictable. Unstable angina occurs when the sternum pain is sudden, new, or changes from the typical pattern, and may signal an impending heart attack.
Angina is relatively common, but can be hard to distinguish from other types of sternum pain, such as the pain or discomfort of indigestion.
If you’re having angina with any of the following signs and symptoms, it may indicate a more serious condition, such as a heart attack:
- Pain in your arms, neck, jaw, shoulder or back accompanying sternum pain
- Nausea
- Fatigue
- Shortness of breath
- Anxiety
- Sweating
- Dizziness or fainting spells
The severity, duration and type of angina can vary. If you have new or changing sternum pain, these new or different symptoms may signal a more dangerous form of angina (unstable angina) or a heart attack. If your angina gets worse or changes, seek emergency medical help immediately.
Pulmonary embolism
Pulmonary embolism occurs when a clot — usually from the veins of your leg or pelvis — lodges in a pulmonary artery of your lung. The lung tissue served by the artery doesn’t get enough blood flow, causing problems with the oxygenation of the blood. This makes it more difficult for your lungs to provide oxygen to the rest of your body.
Signs and symptoms of pulmonary embolism may include:
- Sudden, sharp sternum pain often accompanied by shortness of breath
- Sudden, unexplained shortness of breath, even without pain
- Cough that may produce blood-streaked spit
- Rapid heartbeat associated with shortness of breath
- Fainting
- Severe anxiety
- Unexplained sweating
- Swelling of one leg only, caused by a blood clot in the leg
Pulmonary embolism can be life-threatening. If you have symptoms of a pulmonary embolism, seek emergency medical help immediately.
Aortic dissection
An aortic dissection is a serious condition in which a tear develops in the inner layer of the aorta, the large blood vessel branching off the heart. Blood surges through this tear into the middle layer of the aorta, causing the inner and middle layers to separate (dissect). If the blood-filled channel ruptures through the outside aortic wall, aortic dissection is usually fatal.
Typical signs and symptoms include:
- Sudden severe chest or upper back pain, often described as a tearing, ripping or shearing sensation, that radiates to the neck or down the back
- Loss of consciousness (fainting)
- Shortness of breath
- Sudden difficulty speaking, loss of vision, weakness or paralysis of one side of your body, such as having a stroke
- Sweating
- Weak pulse in one arm compared with the other
If you are experiencing any of these signs or symptoms, they could be caused by an aortic dissection or some other serious condition. Seek emergency medical help immediately.
Pneumonia with pleurisy
Frequent signs and symptoms of pneumonia are sternum pain accompanied by chills, fever and a cough that may produce bloody or foul-smelling sputum. When pneumonia occurs with an inflammation of the membranes that surround the lung (pleura), you may have considerable chest discomfort when taking a breath or coughing. This condition is called pleurisy.
One sign of pleurisy is that the pain is usually relieved temporarily by holding your breath or putting pressure on the painful area of your chest. This isn’t usually true of a heart attack.
If you’ve recently been diagnosed with pneumonia and then start having symptoms of pleurisy, contact your doctor or seek immediate medical attention to determine the cause of your sternum pain. Pleurisy alone isn’t a medical emergency, but you shouldn’t try to make the diagnosis yourself.
Chest wall pain
One of the most common varieties of harmless sternum pain is chest wall pain. One kind of chest wall pain is costochondritis. It causes pain and tenderness in and around the cartilage that connects your ribs to your breastbone (sternum).
In costochondritis, pressing on a few points along the edge of your sternum often results in considerable tenderness in those small areas. If the pressure of a finger causes similar sternum pain, it’s unlikely that a serious condition, such as a heart attack, is the cause of your sternum pain.
Other causes of sternum pain include:
- Strained chest muscles from overuse or excessive coughing
- Chest muscle bruising from minor injury
- Short-term, sudden anxiety with rapid breathing
- Peptic ulcer disease
- Pain from the digestive tract, such as esophageal reflux, peptic ulcer pain or gallbladder pain that may feel similar to heart attack symptoms
- Pericarditis.
Sternum pain treatment
For most causes of sternum pain, it is best to check with your health care provider before treating yourself at home.