Aussie GP reveals signs of silent killer after suffering heart attack at her desk

An Aussie GP has issued a warning about the vague signs that could save your life.

Jacqueline Stanley
7NEWS
Heart attacks present with subtle, vague symptoms in women that are often misdiagnosed, including chest tightness, unexplained tiredness, shortness of breath and sweating rather than the typical crushing chest pain.

Doctors are sounding the alarm on a silent killer disease that poses a greater risk to Australian women than breast cancer, with symptoms so subtle they are often impossible to recognise.

GP Dr Coleen Wood experienced this firsthand when she suffered a heart attack at her desk while seeing patients and didn’t even know it.

WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Silent heart attack symptoms women must know

Sign up to The Nightly's newsletters.

Get the first look at the digital newspaper, curated daily stories and breaking headlines delivered to your inbox.

Email Us
By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.

“The bizarre thing was I saw several people and the heartburn didn’t clear up,” Wood said.

“Because I wasn’t really paying a great deal of attention to it, I just thought it was a nothing situation.”

Throughout the day, the pain worsened, travelling to her jaw, then the cold sweats began.

“Consultation finished and I thought, I’ve got to get myself to hospital,” she said.

There, the doctor became a heart attack patient.

GP Dr Coleen Wood suffered a heart attack while working.
GP Dr Coleen Wood suffered a heart attack while working. Credit: 7NEWS
Cardiologist Dr Jithin Sajeev and GP Dr Coleen Wood.
Cardiologist Dr Jithin Sajeev and GP Dr Coleen Wood. Credit: 7NEWS

Knox Private Hospital cardiologist Dr Jithin Sajeev said about 10 to 15 per cent of patients present with vague symptoms rather than the classic central crushing chest pain.

Those subtle signs include chest tightness, pressure or discomfort, unexplained tiredness, shortness of breath, sweating or gut issues.

“Heart attacks in particular are the second most leading cause of death in women in Australia,” Sajeev said.

“Therefore, this delay in diagnosis may be part of this sort of problem that promotes poorer outcomes.”

According to the Heart Foundation, 19 Australians die every day from heart attacks — that’s one every 80 minutes.

Another 150 people are taken to hospital each day.

“I was very, very fortunate,” Wood said.

Now back at work, Wood is sharing a vital message with Australian women.

“It’s the fact that it presents so differently in women I think is very significant to get that message out there,” she said.

Originally published on 7NEWS

Latest Edition

The Nightly cover for 04-06-2026

Latest Edition

Edition Edition 4 June 20264 June 2026

Peter Malinauskas takes a swing at PM as SA hands down a ‘no surprises’ Budget.