Chest pain coupled with dizziness and nausea can arise from several causes. One possibility is angina, or reduced blood flow to your heart, causing discomfort. While traditional angina symptoms include chest discomfort, shoulder, back, or neck pain, not having typical signs like arm pain or sweating doesn’t entirely rule it out. The symptoms you’re describing, including the non-exertional trigger, necessitate serious consideration of a cardiac origin, especially given the involved areas, so this should be assessed promptly—especially if you have risk factors like a family history of heart disease, hypertension, diabetes, or high cholesterol.
Another potential cause could be a gastroesophageal issue, like acid reflux, which can mimic heart pain and sometimes accompanies dizziness and nausea. It’s less likely to be emergent but still worth considering if you’ve had similar episodes before. Conditions like a hiatal hernia or esophageal spasms could be contributing too. Musculoskeletal issues, like a pinched nerve or costochondritis (inflammation of rib joints), might manifest similarly but are less likely to cause nausea or dizziness.
It’s crucial to emphasize that any persistent or unusual chest pain, particularly when accompanied by dizziness and nausea, should be evaluated immediately by healthcare professionals to rule out any potentially life-threatening conditions such as a myocardial infarction. I recommend seeking urgent medical attention—preferably calling emergency services or going to an emergency department. This ensures you can get an appropriate workup, including an ECG and potentially other tests like blood work or imaging, to quickly identify the cause and get proper treatment. If it turns out less serious reassurance can be provided, though better err on the side of caution.
Hello, thank for sharing your concern. You have sudden onset chest pain, and it must be evaluated for heart disease on an urgent basis. So, kindly visit your nearest hospital and get an ECG done. If it comes out to be normal, then we’ll see about other causes of chest pain as they would be not so serious, but having a heart issue is one of the most serious issues. So kindly visit your nearest hospital.
Feel free to reach out again.
Regards, Dr. Nirav Jain MBBS, D.Fam.Medicine
Sudden chest pain with dizziness and nausea can be frightening, and there are several possible causes. The fact that the pain lasted less than an hour, there was no shortness of breath or sweating, and you have significant recent stress makes some serious causes less likely, but they still need to be considered carefully—especially because you now have persistent pain traveling from the ring finger up the arm to the shoulder and back.
One important condition doctors always rule out is Acute Coronary Syndrome, which includes heart attack. This typically causes pressure-like chest pain that may spread to the arm, shoulder, jaw, or back, often with sweating or breathlessness, but sometimes symptoms can be atypical.
Another common cause that fits your description—especially the pain starting in the finger and moving up the arm—is Cervical Radiculopathy. This can produce continuous pain radiating from the hand or fingers up the arm into the shoulder and back, and may be triggered by posture, muscle strain, or a pinched nerve.
Stress and anxiety can also cause episodes of chest pain, dizziness, and nausea through Panic Attack, particularly when stress levels are extreme, as you reported.
Other possible but generally less dangerous causes include Costochondritis (sharp localized chest pain, worse with movement or pressing the area) or acid reflux.
You should seek urgent medical evaluation today (clinic or emergency department) if the arm pain is persistent after a chest pain episode, even if symptoms are moderate. Doctors will typically perform an ECG, check blood tests for heart markers, and possibly evaluate the neck or nerves depending on findings. This is especially important the first time this pattern occurs.
Go to emergency care immediately if any of the following happen: chest pain returns or worsens, pain spreads to the jaw or left arm, shortness of breath develops, you feel faint, or new weakness or numbness appears.
If the pain remains stable but persistent, the most likely causes statistically are nerve-related or musculoskeletal, particularly with stress and possible posture strain, but confirmation with basic tests is the safest next step.
Hello Thank you for sharing these details—your concern is completely understandable.
You’ve described: - Sudden chest pain (lower left side) radiating to shoulder, back, and behind the left ear - Dizziness and nausea - Persistent pain starting from the ring finger, radiating up the arm to the shoulder and back - No shortness of breath, sweating, or classic arm pain
### What Could Be Going On? While your symptoms are not classic for a heart attack (no shortness of breath, sweating, or crushing chest pain), chest pain with radiation, dizziness, and nausea always needs to be taken seriously, especially when pain is persistent and involves the arm and back.
Possible causes include: - Musculoskeletal pain (like a pinched nerve, muscle strain, or cervical spine issue) - Nerve-related pain (such as cervical radiculopathy or a nerve impingement) - Less likely but important to rule out: heart-related causes (especially if you have risk factors or family history) - Gastrointestinal causes (like acid reflux or esophageal spasm) - Rarely, anxiety or panic attacks can cause similar symptoms
### What Should You Do? Because your pain is persistent, radiates, and was associated with dizziness and nausea, it’s safest to get checked by a doctor as soon as possible—preferably today. Even though you don’t have all the classic heart symptoms, it’s important to rule out anything serious.
You should seek urgent medical attention if: - The pain gets worse or becomes severe - You develop shortness of breath, sweating, fainting, or palpitations - You feel weak, confused, or have trouble speaking
### What Tests Might Be Needed? - ECG (Electrocardiogram) and possibly blood tests to rule out heart issues - Chest X-ray - Neck and spine evaluation if nerve pain is suspected
Bottom line: Please see a doctor or visit the ER/urgent care for an evaluation. It’s always better to be safe with chest pain, especially with your symptoms.
Thank you
Hi patient ⚠️ Your symptoms – lower left chest pain radiating to shoulder, back, behind left ear + dizziness + nausea – are concerning. Even without shortness of breath or sweating, this could be heart-related (angina, arrhythmia, or silent MI) or other serious issues (e.g., aortic dissection, esophageal spasm).
Do not wait. Seek urgent medical evaluation immediately – go to an emergency room or call for help.
Why urgent?
· Pain radiation to back & ear + dizziness = possible cardiac or vascular origin · Past mild episodes + now worse with nausea = pattern may be progressing · Stress + prescription meds (unknown) – need ECG and blood work to rule out heart attack
What to do right now:
· Do not drive yourself – get someone to take you or call emergency services · Do not eat or drink (in case procedure needed) · Tell ER doctor: pain radiation, dizziness, nausea, meds you take, recent stress · Avoid taking any painkiller unless advised by ER
Do not ignore – even if symptoms have eased, underlying cause remains risky.
Dr Nikhil Chauhan
Your symptoms—sudden left-sided chest pain with dizziness and nausea, plus ongoing pain radiating from the ring finger up the arm to the shoulder and back—should be taken seriously, even though some features may suggest a non-cardiac cause. While it could be related to muscle strain, nerve irritation (like cervical radiculopathy), or anxiety, the pattern of chest pain with radiation still raises concern for a possible **Angina or, less commonly at your age, a **Myocardial infarction. Not everyone has classic symptoms (like sweating or breathlessness), so it’s important not to ignore this.
The continuous pain starting from the ring finger and moving upward also points toward a nerve-related issue (possibly from the neck or ulnar nerve pathway), but this does not fully explain the chest discomfort you had earlier. Stress and anxiety can mimic these symptoms, but they are considered a diagnosis of exclusion, meaning more serious causes must be ruled out first.
Given the combination of symptoms, it is safest to seek medical evaluation as soon as possible (preferably today or emergency if symptoms return/worsen). A doctor may perform tests like an ECG, blood tests (troponin), and possibly a chest or spine evaluation to rule out heart and nerve-related causes.
In summary, while this may turn out to be something less serious like nerve pain or stress-related symptoms, the initial chest pain with radiation and dizziness makes it important to get checked promptly rather than waiting at home.
