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Heart Attack and Unstable Angina
Medications
Take all of your medicines correctly. Do not stop taking your medicine unless your doctor tells you to. Taking medicine can lower your risk of having another heart attack or dying from coronary artery disease.
In the ambulance and emergency room
Treatment for a heart attack or Reference unstable angina Opens New Window begins with medicines in the ambulance and emergency room. This treatment is similar for both. The goal is to prevent permanent heart muscle damage or prevent a heart attack by restoring blood flow to your heart as quickly as possible.
You will receive:
- Reference Morphine for pain relief.
- Reference Oxygen therapy Opens New Window to increase oxygen in your blood.
- Reference Nitroglycerin to open up the arteries to the heart to help blood to flow to the heart.
- Reference Beta-blockers to lower the heart rate, blood pressure, and the workload of the heart.
You also will receive medicines to stop blood clots so blood can flow to the heart. Some medicines will break up blood clots to increase blood flow. You might be given:
- Reference Aspirin, which you chew as soon as possible after calling 911 .
- Reference Antiplatelet medicine, such as clopidogrel.
- Reference Anticoagulants, such as heparin.
- Reference Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors to help prevent blood clots from forming.
- Reference Thrombolytics to break up or dissolve blood clots.
In the hospital and at home
In the hospital, your doctors will start you on medicines that lower your risk of having complications or another heart attack. You may already have taken some of these medicines. They can help you live longer after a heart attack. You will take these medicines for a long time, maybe the rest of your life.
Medicine to lower blood pressure and the heart's workload
Medicine to prevent blood clots from forming and causing another heart attack
Medicine to lower cholesterol
Medicine to manage angina symptoms
What to think about
You may have Reference regular blood tests to monitor how the medicine is working in your body. Your doctor will likely let you know when you need to have the tests.
If your doctor recommends daily aspirin, don't substitute nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), such as ibuprofen (Advil, for example) or naproxen (such as Aleve), for the aspirin. NSAIDS relieve pain and inflammation much like aspirin does, but they do not affect blood clotting in the same way that aspirin does. NSAIDs do not lower your risk of another heart attack. In fact, NSAIDs may raise your risk for a heart attack or stroke.
If you need to take an NSAID for a long time, such as for pain, talk with your doctor to see if it is safe for you. For more information about daily aspirin and NSAIDs, see Reference Low-Dose Aspirin Therapy.
This information does not replace the advice of a doctor. Healthwise, Incorporated disclaims any warranty or liability for your use of this information. Your use of this information means that you agree to the Reference Terms of Use. Reference How this information was developed to help you make better health decisions.


Topic Contents
- Overview
-
Health Tools
- FAQs
- Cause
- Symptoms
- What Increases Your Risk
- When to Call a Doctor
- Exams and Tests
- Treatment Overview
- Prevention
- Preventing Another Heart Attack
- Life After a Heart Attack
- Medications
- Surgery
- Treatment for Complications
- End-of-Life Decisions
- Other Places To Get Help
- Related Information
- References
- Credits
