🫀 What can happen before a heart attack
Some people may experience weeks or days of warning symptoms, such as:
- chest pressure or discomfort
- shortness of breath
- unusual fatigue
- reduced exercise tolerance
- nausea or indigestion-like discomfort
But these are not limited to the feet.
🦶 Foot and leg signs that may relate to heart or circulation problems
Some symptoms in the lower limbs can be linked to cardiovascular disease, especially poor circulation, but they are not specific “heart attack predictors”:
1. Cold feet or legs
May suggest reduced blood flow due to artery narrowing.
2. Pain in legs when walking (claudication)
Often linked to Peripheral Artery Disease, which increases overall heart risk.
3. Swelling in feet or ankles
Can be related to heart failure, kidney issues, or other conditions—not a direct heart attack warning.
4. Slow-healing sores on feet
May indicate poor circulation or diabetes-related complications.
5. Numbness or tingling
Often linked to nerve issues such as Diabetic Neuropathy rather than heart attacks directly.
🚨 Important truth
- Heart attacks are usually not predictable a month in advance from foot symptoms
- Many people have no clear warning at all
- Symptoms, when they occur, are usually chest-related or general (fatigue, breathlessness)
🧠 Bottom line
Foot changes can sometimes reflect circulation or metabolic problems, but the idea of “6 foot signs a month before a heart attack” is an oversimplification used to attract attention, not a medically reliable prediction system.
If you want, I can show you the real early warning signs of heart disease vs heart attack symptoms, so you can clearly separate myth from medically important signals.
