- Pain or pressure radiating to the left arm, jaw, neck, or back
- Sudden shortness of breath at rest
- Profuse sweating, pallor, or fainting
- Palpitations with near-syncope or loss of consciousness
- A sudden overwhelming sense of impending doom (angor animi)
- Coughing up blood or visible cyanosis of the lips or fingertips
Introduction
Chest tightness is one of the most common reasons for emergency department visits and ambulance calls worldwide. The symptom encompasses a broad spectrum of conditions — from relatively benign anxiety disorders to immediately life-threatening emergencies such as acute myocardial infarction and pulmonary embolism. Studies suggest that chest pain and discomfort account for approximately 5–8% of all emergency department presentations across Europe and North America.
From an emergency medicine perspective, the primary objective is to rapidly exclude life-threatening causes, followed by a systematic evaluation of the remaining differential diagnoses. This article provides a comprehensive guide to the possible causes of chest tightness, differential diagnosis methods, diagnostic algorithms, and criteria for specialist referral and treatment.
Definition and Characterization of the Symptom
Patients describe chest tightness in a variety of ways: “a heavy weight on my chest,” “a squeezing sensation,” “a band around my chest,” “burning behind the breastbone,” or “an inability to take a full breath.” Unlike sharp, well-localized pain, tightness is typically diffuse, dull, and difficult to pinpoint precisely.
The following parameters — collected using the OPQRST framework — are essential for rapid risk stratification:
- Onset – sudden vs. gradual; at rest vs. on exertion
- Provocation/Palliation – exertion, stress, meals, body position, nitroglycerin, antacids
- Quality – pressure, squeezing, burning, tightening, heaviness
- Region/Radiation – retrosternal, left-sided, bilateral; radiation to arm, jaw, or back
- Severity – NRS 0–10 scale
- Time – duration: seconds, minutes, hours, or days; constant vs. episodic
- Associated symptoms – dyspnea, palpitations, diaphoresis, nausea, cough, fever, heartburn
- Cardiovascular history – coronary artery disease, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, smoking
Differential Diagnosis – Overview Table
The table below summarizes the most important causes of chest tightness, grouped by category, with an assessment of urgency.
| Category | Diagnosis | Typical Features | Urgency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cardiac | Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) / MI (STEMI/NSTEMI) | Severe retrosternal pressure, radiation to arm/jaw, diaphoresis, dyspnea; duration >20 min | EMERGENCY |
| Stable angina pectoris | Exertional pressure, relieved by nitroglycerin or rest; <20 min | URGENT | |
| Pericarditis | Pressure/pain worsening supine, relieved leaning forward; fever, pericardial friction rub | URGENT | |
| Arrhythmia / cardiomyopathy | Palpitations, dizziness, syncope, chest tightness | URGENT | |
| Aortic dissection | Sudden tearing pressure radiating to the back; BP difference between arms; new aortic regurgitation | EMERGENCY | |
| Pulmonary | Pulmonary embolism (PE) | Sudden pressure, dyspnea, tachycardia, pleuritic chest pain; DVT risk factors | EMERGENCY |
| Pneumothorax | Sudden unilateral tightness and dyspnea; absent breath sounds; tension PNX = hemodynamic collapse | EMERGENCY | |
| Asthma / COPD exacerbation | Chest tightness, wheezing, cough, prolonged expiration; reduced SpO₂ | URGENT | |
| Pleuritis / pneumonia | Pleuritic pain, cough, fever; tightness may accompany pleural effusion | URGENT | |
| Gastrointestinal | Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) | Burning/pressure behind sternum after meals or lying down; acid regurgitation | ELECTIVE |
| Esophageal spasm | Sudden severe retrosternal pressure; may respond to nitroglycerin; linked to swallowing | URGENT | |
| Hiatal hernia / bloating | Fullness and pressure after eating; belching; worsens postprandially | ELECTIVE | |
| Psychogenic / Functional | Anxiety disorder / panic attack | Sudden tightness, palpitations, dyspnea, paresthesias, derealization; normal ECG | URGENT* |
| Hyperventilation syndrome | Tightness and dyspnea with rapid shallow breathing; tingling, carpopedal spasm | ELECTIVE | |
| Musculoskeletal | Costochondritis | Tenderness on palpation of costochondral junctions; no radiation; worsens with movement | ELECTIVE |
| Tietze syndrome | Painful swelling of 2nd–4th costochondral junction; local warmth | ELECTIVE | |
| Other | Herpes zoster (pre-rash phase) | Unilateral burning/tightness preceding rash by 2–3 days; dermatomal distribution | URGENT |
| Severe anemia | Exertional tightness and dyspnea with low Hb; tachycardia, pallor | URGENT |
* A psychogenic diagnosis should only be made after organic causes have been excluded.
Cardiac Causes – Detailed Review
Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS)
Acute coronary syndrome encompasses unstable angina, non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI), and ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). The classic presentation is severe retrosternal pressure or squeezing lasting more than 20 minutes, accompanied by diaphoresis, dyspnea, nausea, and pain radiating to the left arm, jaw, or neck. In women, older adults, and diabetic patients, the presentation may be atypical — dominated by fatigue, dyspnea, or epigastric pain without overt chest pressure.
Diagnosis rests on a 12-lead ECG (ST elevation/depression, new left bundle branch block), serial high-sensitivity cardiac troponins (at 0, 1, and 3 hours), and point-of-care echocardiography. For STEMI, the door-to-balloon time for primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) should not exceed 90 minutes.
Stable Angina Pectoris
Stable angina results from transient myocardial ischemia caused by atherosclerotic narrowing of a coronary artery. Retrosternal pressure appears predictably during physical exertion or emotional stress and resolves within minutes of rest or sublingual nitroglycerin. Symptom severity is graded using the Canadian Cardiovascular Society (CCS) classification (I–IV). Diagnostic workup includes an exercise stress test, myocardial perfusion scintigraphy, or coronary angiography depending on pretest probability.
Pericarditis
Pericarditis most commonly has a viral etiology (Coxsackievirus, EBV, CMV). Chest pain or tightness is typically worsened in the supine position and during inspiration, and relieved by leaning forward. The characteristic ECG finding is diffuse saddle-shaped ST elevation with PR-segment depression. Elevated CRP, ESR, and leukocytosis confirm the inflammatory process. Treatment includes NSAIDs and colchicine.
Aortic Dissection
Although rare, aortic dissection is immediately life-threatening and demands rapid diagnosis. Pain or pressure is typically described as “tearing” or “ripping,” sudden in onset, and radiates to the interscapular region. A blood pressure difference of more than 20 mmHg between arms, pulse asymmetry, or new aortic regurgitation should prompt urgent CT angiography of the aorta. Mortality increases by approximately 1–2% per hour without treatment.
Pulmonary Causes
Pulmonary Embolism
Pulmonary embolism (PE) presents with sudden chest tightness or pleuritic chest pain, dyspnea, tachycardia, and in severe cases, hypoxemia and obstructive shock. Risk factors include immobilization, long-haul travel, recent surgery, malignancy, pregnancy, oral contraceptive use, and thrombophilia. Clinical probability is assessed using the Wells or Geneva score. CT pulmonary angiography is the definitive investigation. A high-sensitivity D-dimer can exclude PE in low-probability patients.
Pneumothorax
Spontaneous pneumothorax most commonly affects young, tall, thin males. Sudden unilateral chest tightness with dyspnea requires urgent chest X-ray or point-of-care lung ultrasound. Tension pneumothorax is a life-threatening emergency — tachycardia, hypotension, tracheal deviation, and absent ipsilateral breath sounds demand immediate needle decompression at the second intercostal space, midclavicular line, without waiting for imaging.
Asthma and COPD
During an acute exacerbation of asthma or COPD, chest tightness coincides with wheeze, cough, and prolonged expiration. Spirometry demonstrates airflow obstruction (FEV₁/FVC <0.70). Management includes short-acting β₂-agonists (SABA), systemic corticosteroids, and controlled oxygen therapy targeting SpO₂ 88–92% in COPD or ≥94% in asthma.
Gastrointestinal Causes
Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD)
GERD is one of the most common causes of non-cardiac chest pain, accounting for 20–30% of cases referred for cardiac evaluation. Burning pressure behind the sternum worsens after fatty meals, alcohol, coffee, and in the supine position. Diagnosis is confirmed by 24-hour ambulatory pH monitoring or upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. First-line treatment is a proton pump inhibitor (PPI) for at least 8 weeks alongside lifestyle modification.
Esophageal Spasm
Diffuse esophageal spasm can closely mimic cardiac chest pain — it may be sudden, severe, retrosternal, and occasionally relieved by nitroglycerin. Unlike angina, it is usually associated with swallowing or occurs spontaneously. Differentiation requires esophageal manometry, which demonstrates high-amplitude, simultaneous, non-peristaltic contractions.
Psychogenic and Functional Causes
Anxiety disorders and panic attacks are a frequently underrecognized cause of chest tightness, particularly in young adults without cardiovascular risk factors. A panic attack presents with sudden pressure, palpitations, dyspnea, paresthesias, dizziness, and an intense fear of dying. ECG and laboratory results remain normal. It is critical, however, that a “functional” or “psychogenic” label is applied only after organic causes have been systematically excluded.
Clinical Note: Hyperventilation secondary to anxiety lowers PaCO₂, causing respiratory alkalosis that paradoxically intensifies chest tightness and peripheral tingling (hypocapnic tetany). A simple therapeutic test is controlled breathing with a prolonged exhalation phase — normalization of symptoms supports a psychogenic etiology.
Diagnostic Algorithm
Step 1 – Initial Assessment and Physical Examination
Every patient with chest tightness should undergo immediate measurement of heart rate, blood pressure in both arms, SpO₂, respiratory rate, and temperature. The OPQRST history combined with the physical examination provides the foundation for risk stratification.
Step 2 – 12-Lead ECG
An ECG must be obtained within 10 minutes of first medical contact. Key findings to seek include: ST elevation or depression, new bundle branch block, arrhythmias, pericarditic saddle-shaped ST changes, right-heart strain pattern (S1Q3T3 in PE), low voltages (pericardial effusion/tamponade), and signs of ventricular hypertrophy.
Step 3 – Laboratory Tests
Depending on the clinical picture: high-sensitivity cardiac troponins (hsTnI or hsTnT) using a 0/1/3-hour protocol, D-dimer (if PE is suspected), full blood count, CRP, procalcitonin, BNP or NT-proBNP (heart failure assessment), liver enzymes, lipase, and arterial blood gas analysis.
Step 4 – Chest X-Ray
Chest radiography allows assessment of cardiac silhouette size, identification of pneumothorax, pleural effusion, consolidation, widened mediastinum (aortic dissection), and pulmonary vascular congestion in heart failure.
Step 5 – Point-of-Care Echocardiography (POCUS)
Bedside cardiac ultrasound rapidly evaluates left ventricular systolic function, pericardial effusion, right ventricular dilation (suggesting PE), and regional wall motion abnormalities. In modern emergency medicine, POCUS has become an indispensable tool in the initial assessment of chest tightness.
Step 6 – Advanced Investigations
Based on initial findings, further workup may include: coronary angiography (ACS), CT pulmonary angiography (PE, aortic dissection), exercise stress test (stable angina), spirometry (asthma/COPD), 24-hour esophageal pH monitoring (GERD), esophageal manometry (esophageal spasm), or psychiatric assessment (anxiety disorders).
When to Call Emergency Services
The following situations require an immediate call to emergency services (911 / 112):
- Chest tightness lasting more than 15–20 minutes without relief
- Pressure or pain radiating to the left arm, shoulder, jaw, or back
- Accompanying shortness of breath at rest or significantly increased respiratory rate
- Fainting, pre-syncope, or sudden severe weakness
- Cyanosis of the lips, fingers, or face
- Coughing up blood-stained sputum
- Chest tightness in a person with known heart disease or after a recent myocardial infarction
Treatment – Overview
Treatment depends on the confirmed diagnosis. In the pre-hospital and initial in-hospital phase, the following general principles apply:
- ACS/STEMI: Aspirin 300 mg orally, sublingual nitroglycerin (if SBP >90 mmHg), oxygen if SpO₂ <94%, immediate reperfusion therapy (primary PCI or thrombolysis)
- Stable angina: Sublingual nitroglycerin, beta-blockers, risk factor modification, statins, coronary revascularization when indicated
- High-risk PE: Systemic thrombolysis (rt-PA), catheter-directed therapy, or surgical embolectomy; anticoagulation with unfractionated heparin
- Asthma/COPD: Inhaled SABA, systemic corticosteroids, controlled oxygen therapy
- GERD: PPI therapy for at least 8 weeks, dietary and lifestyle modification
- Panic/anxiety: Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), SSRIs, diaphragmatic breathing techniques
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- Does chest tightness always mean a heart attack?
- What tests are done for chest tightness?
- When is chest tightness a medical emergency?
- Can stress and anxiety cause chest tightness?
- Can chest tightness be a symptom of angina pectoris?
References
- Collet J-P, et al. 2020 ESC Guidelines for the management of acute coronary syndromes in patients presenting without persistent ST-segment elevation. Eur Heart J. 2021;42(14):1289–1367.
- Ibanez B, et al. 2017 ESC Guidelines for the management of acute myocardial infarction in patients presenting with ST-segment elevation. Eur Heart J. 2018;39(2):119–177.
- Konstantinides SV, et al. 2019 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and management of acute pulmonary embolism. Eur Heart J. 2020;41(4):543–603.
- Adler Y, et al. 2015 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and management of pericardial diseases. Eur Heart J. 2015;36(42):2921–2964.
- Koop H. Gastroesophageal reflux disease and noncardiac chest pain. Best Pract Res Clin Gastroenterol. 2013;27(3):389–397.
- Fass R, Achem SR. Noncardiac chest pain: epidemiology, natural course and pathogenesis. J Neurogastroenterol Motil. 2011;17(2):110–123.
- Marks EM, et al. Panic disorder and non-cardiac chest pain in the emergency department: a systematic review. Heart Lung. 2014;43(6):527–533.
- Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA). Global Strategy for Asthma Management and Prevention. Updated 2024. Available at: ginasthma.org.
- Kloner RA, et al. Chest pain in the emergency department. Circulation. 2021;144(14):1137–1153.
- Konstantinides SV, et al. ESC Scientific Document Group. 2019 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and management of acute pulmonary embolism. Eur Heart J. 2020;41(4):543–603.
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