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Research
lacking on why Heart Disease is more deadly
for Women
Newswise — A woman who has heart disease is
50% more likely to die from it than a man
who has it. Although experts can point to a
number of possible explanations for this,
the research on women and heart disease
remains inadequate, says the new edition of
a Harvard Medical School report, The Healthy
Heart: Preventing, detecting, and treating
coronary artery disease.
Even though men are more likely to develop
cardiovascular disease than women, about 38%
of women who have a heart attack die within
a year of the event, compared with 25% of
men. And women are almost twice as likely as
men to have a second heart attack within six
years of the first.
The science behind the differences is
unclear. These are some of the theories
discussed in The Healthy Heart:
• Age. Women seem to become more vulnerable
to heart disease only after their estrogen
levels fall with menopause, and so they tend
to suffer first heart attacks later than
men. Advanced age may make it more difficult
to survive a heart attack.
• Coronary microvascular disease. This new
diagnosis may apply to 50% to 60% of women,
compared with 20% of men. These people have
chest pain when they are active or stressed,
but on angiograms, their coronary arteries
appear clear. Studies show that women with
coronary microvascular disease have a higher
risk for heart attack or stroke.
• Inferior diagnosis and treatment. Some
studies suggest women’s heart problems don’t
receive the same attention as men’s.
• Incomplete understanding of symptoms.
Classic heart attack symptoms were defined
based on studies on men. These symptoms
don’t always occur in women, which may delay
diagnosis and treatment.
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