Introduction: Who Should Undergo Diagnostics
If you experience chest discomfort, pressure, squeezing, or tightness—especially during physical activity or emotional stress—it’s important to seek medical evaluation right away. Angina is not a disease itself, but a symptom that your heart muscle isn’t receiving enough blood flow, most often due to narrowed or blocked coronary arteries. About 11 million people in the United States experience angina, and recognizing its signs early can help prevent serious complications like heart attacks.[2]
You should consider diagnostic testing if you notice any chest discomfort that feels like heaviness, burning similar to heartburn, or crushing pressure. This discomfort may spread to your jaw, teeth, shoulders, arms, neck, or back. Sometimes angina comes with other symptoms like sweating, dizziness, weakness, upset stomach, nausea, or feeling clammy.[2] It’s especially important to get checked if these symptoms happen during exertion—such as walking uphill, climbing stairs quickly, or doing physical work—and ease up when you rest.
People with certain risk factors should be particularly vigilant about seeking diagnostics. These include individuals with a family history of early heart disease, those who smoke or have smoked, people with diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or obesity. Other risk factors include being older in age, having low levels of “good” HDL cholesterol, elevated levels of homocysteine or certain other blood substances, and conditions like metabolic syndrome, which involves a cluster of issues including high blood sugar, abdominal obesity, high triglycerides, low HDL cholesterol, and high blood pressure.[7]
Even if your chest discomfort seems minor or unclear, don’t ignore it. Many people cannot easily distinguish angina from other types of chest pain, such as heartburn or muscle strain. Some may experience what feels like vague discomfort rather than actual pain. Women, older adults, and people with diabetes may have atypical symptoms that don’t fit the classic pattern. Because angina can be a warning sign of a heart attack—sometimes appearing days or even weeks before a major cardiac event—early diagnostic evaluation is vital to protect your heart and your life.[2]
Diagnostic Methods
Diagnosing angina pectoris involves a combination of reviewing your medical history, conducting a physical examination, and performing various tests to confirm the presence of heart disease and rule out other possible causes of chest discomfort. Your healthcare provider will begin by asking detailed questions about your symptoms: what the discomfort feels like, where it occurs, what triggers it, how long it lasts, and whether rest or medication relieves it. They will also ask about your family history of heart disease, lifestyle habits like smoking or diet, and whether you have conditions such as diabetes, high blood pressure, or high cholesterol.[3]
Physical Examination
During the physical exam, your doctor will check your blood pressure, heart rate, breathing rate, and other vital signs—basic measurements that show how your body is functioning. They may listen to your heart with a stethoscope to detect irregular rhythms or abnormal sounds, and they may examine other parts of your body for signs of heart disease, such as swelling in the legs or changes in pulse strength in different areas.[3]
Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG)
An electrocardiogram, often called an ECG or EKG, is one of the most common and important first tests for angina. This quick, painless test measures the electrical activity of your heart. Small sticky patches called electrodes are placed on your chest and sometimes on your arms and legs. Wires connect these electrodes to a machine that records your heart’s electrical signals and prints them out as a pattern of waves. The test can reveal if your heart is beating too fast or too slow, and it can show areas of the heart muscle that may be damaged or not getting enough oxygen. An ECG can also detect if you’ve had a heart attack in the past.[10]
However, an ECG taken while you’re resting may appear normal even if you have angina, especially if you’re not experiencing symptoms at the time of the test. That’s why additional testing is often needed to get a complete picture.
Blood Tests
Blood tests can provide valuable information about your heart and overall health. Certain heart proteins, called cardiac enzymes, leak into the bloodstream when the heart muscle is damaged, such as after a heart attack. Testing for these enzymes, particularly troponin, helps doctors determine if heart damage has occurred.[3] Blood tests can also measure cholesterol levels—including LDL (“bad” cholesterol), HDL (“good” cholesterol), and triglycerides—to assess your risk for coronary artery disease. Other blood work may check for anemia, diabetes, thyroid problems, or kidney function, all of which can affect heart health or contribute to symptoms.[4]
Stress Testing
A stress test evaluates how your heart performs during physical exertion. Angina often occurs during activity when the heart needs more oxygen, so observing your heart under stress can reveal problems that don’t show up at rest. During a standard stress test, you’ll walk on a treadmill or pedal a stationary bike while your heart’s electrical activity is monitored with an ECG. Your blood pressure and symptoms are also tracked. The test continues until you reach a target heart rate, develop symptoms, or show ECG changes indicating poor blood flow to the heart.[3]
If you’re unable to exercise due to physical limitations, your doctor may use medications that mimic the effects of exercise on your heart. These drugs increase your heart rate or dilate your blood vessels, allowing doctors to see how your heart responds to stress without physical activity.[10]
Imaging Tests During Stress
Sometimes a basic stress test is combined with imaging to provide more detailed information. A stress echocardiogram uses ultrasound—sound waves—to create moving pictures of your heart before and after exercise. This test shows how well your heart muscle contracts and how blood flows through your heart chambers and valves. Areas of the heart that don’t receive enough blood during stress will move less effectively than normal areas.[4]
A nuclear stress test involves injecting a small amount of radioactive tracer into your bloodstream during exercise. A special camera detects the tracer and creates images showing blood flow to different parts of your heart muscle. Areas that don’t light up as brightly indicate reduced blood flow, suggesting blocked or narrowed coronary arteries.[10]
Chest X-Ray
A chest X-ray uses a small amount of radiation to create a picture of your heart, lungs, and chest bones. While it doesn’t directly diagnose angina, it helps rule out other causes of chest pain, such as pneumonia, lung problems, or fluid around the heart. It can also show if your heart is enlarged, which may indicate heart disease.[4]
Echocardiogram
An echocardiogram is an ultrasound test that uses sound waves to create detailed moving images of your heart’s structure and function. It shows the size and shape of your heart chambers, how well the heart muscle contracts, and how blood flows through the heart valves. This test can identify problems with heart muscle function that result from poor blood flow. It’s painless and noninvasive, performed by moving a wand-like device over your chest while you lie on an exam table.[10]
CT Scans
A computed tomography (CT) scan of the chest combines special X-ray equipment with computer processing to produce detailed cross-sectional images of your heart and blood vessels. A chest CT can identify other causes of chest pain, such as disease of the aorta (the body’s largest artery) or blood clots in the lungs.[4]
Coronary CT angiography is a specialized CT scan that evaluates the coronary arteries specifically. Contrast dye is injected through a vein in your arm, and the CT scanner takes detailed pictures of your coronary arteries. This test can reveal narrowing or blockages caused by plaque buildup without requiring an invasive procedure. It’s particularly useful for people with low to moderate risk of coronary artery disease.[4]
Cardiac MRI
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the heart uses powerful magnets and radio waves to create detailed images of your heart’s structure and function. Cardiac MRI can show areas of the heart muscle that have been damaged by poor blood flow and can assess how well blood flows through the coronary arteries. It’s a noninvasive test that doesn’t use radiation, though it takes longer than a CT scan and may not be suitable for people with certain metal implants.[4]
Coronary Angiography
Coronary angiography, also called cardiac catheterization, is considered the gold standard for directly visualizing the coronary arteries. During this procedure, a thin, flexible tube called a catheter is inserted into a blood vessel in your groin or arm and carefully guided to your heart. A special dye is injected through the catheter into your coronary arteries, and X-ray images are taken. The dye makes your coronary arteries visible on the X-rays, allowing doctors to see exactly where and how severely they’re narrowed or blocked.[3]
This procedure is more invasive than other tests and carries a small risk of complications, but it provides the most precise information about coronary artery disease. In some cases, if a significant blockage is found, it can be treated immediately during the same procedure using angioplasty and stent placement.[6]
Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification
When patients with angina pectoris are being considered for enrollment in clinical trials, specific diagnostic tests and criteria are used as standard requirements to ensure participants meet the study’s conditions. Clinical trials test new treatments, medications, or procedures, and they need to confirm that participants have the disease being studied and don’t have other conditions that might interfere with the research.
Most clinical trials for angina require documentation of coronary artery disease through objective testing. This typically means participants must have undergone coronary angiography showing at least 50% narrowing in one or more major coronary arteries, or 70% narrowing in smaller branches. Some trials may accept alternative proof, such as a positive stress test showing clear evidence of reduced blood flow to the heart muscle, or previous documentation of a heart attack.[7]
Trials often classify participants by the type and severity of their angina. The most common classification system uses a scale from 1 to 4, where higher numbers indicate more severe angina that occurs with less exertion. Class 1 angina happens only with strenuous or prolonged activity. Class 2 angina causes slight limitation of ordinary activity, occurring with brisk walking or stair climbing. Class 3 angina causes marked limitation, happening with walking even short distances at normal pace. Class 4 angina occurs with any physical activity or even at rest.[2] Clinical trials may limit enrollment to specific classes, depending on what they’re testing.
Blood tests are standard requirements for trial qualification. Participants typically need recent measurements of cholesterol levels (total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, and triglycerides), blood sugar or hemoglobin A1c to check for diabetes, kidney function tests, liver function tests, and a complete blood count. Cardiac enzyme tests, particularly troponin levels, may be required to confirm whether someone has had recent heart muscle damage.[4]
A recent electrocardiogram is almost always required for clinical trial enrollment. The ECG helps document heart rhythm abnormalities, previous heart attacks, and baseline electrical activity of the heart. Some trials require participants to have specific ECG findings consistent with coronary disease, while others may exclude people with certain abnormalities that could affect study results.[10]
Imaging tests are frequently required to assess heart function and structure. An echocardiogram may be needed to measure ejection fraction—the percentage of blood pumped out of the heart with each beat—and to evaluate heart valve function and chamber size. Many trials have specific ejection fraction requirements, often excluding patients with very weak heart muscle. Stress testing with imaging, such as stress echocardiography or nuclear imaging, may be required to objectively document reduced blood flow during exertion.[10]
Some trials investigating specific aspects of coronary disease may require advanced imaging like coronary CT angiography or cardiac MRI to precisely characterize plaque burden, artery anatomy, or areas of heart muscle damage. These tests provide detailed information about the extent and location of disease, which helps researchers understand whether a treatment is working.[4]
Clinical trials may also require documentation of medication history and response. Participants often need to be on stable doses of standard angina medications for a certain period before enrollment. They may need to keep a diary recording the frequency of angina episodes and use of short-acting nitroglycerin. This baseline information allows researchers to measure whether the experimental treatment improves symptoms compared to the patient’s usual state.
Exclusion criteria are equally important in clinical trials. Certain diagnostic findings may disqualify someone from participation. For example, trials may exclude people with severe kidney disease based on blood creatinine levels, those with severe heart failure based on echocardiogram results, or those with certain ECG abnormalities that could interfere with study measurements. Recent heart attacks, strokes, or major procedures within a specified timeframe are common exclusion criteria that must be documented through medical records and diagnostic tests.[7]


