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Heart disease and women

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Illustrations

Heart, section through the middle
Heart, section through the middle
Heart, front view
Heart, front view
Acute MI
Acute MI

Alternative Names    Return to top

Women and heart disease

Information    Return to top

Mention the term "heart attack" and most people imagine a pudgy, middle-aged man drenched in sweat and clutching his chest. Few people seem to consider cardiovascular disease (CVD) as a woman's disease.

But according to the American Heart Association, cardiovascular disease is the leading killer of women over age 25. It kills nearly twice as many women in the United States than all types of cancer, including breast cancer. Only 13 percent of women think heart disease is a threat to their health.

The misleading notion that heart disease is not a real problem for women can be blamed in part on medical research. For a very long time, heart disease studies have focused primarily on men. Changes are under way, but some doctors still fail to recognize the warning signs displayed by female patients.

EARLY HEART SIGNS

Studies have shown that women have undiagnosed warning signs weeks, months, and even years before having a heart attack.

Significant differences exist in the symptoms displayed by women and men. Men typically experience the "classic" heart attack signs: tightness in the chest, arm pain, and shortness of breath. Women's symptoms -- nausea, an overwhelming fatigue, and dizziness -- are strikingly different and are often chalked up to stress. Women have reported that they have had a hard time getting their doctors to listen to them about these early warning symptoms.

Unusual fatigue, trouble sleeping, shortness of breath, indigestion, and anxiety were the top 5 symptoms reported by both black and white women in the study. However, black women had more intense episodes and reported them more often.

ACT IN TIME

Recognizing and treating a heart attack right away dramatically improves a patient's chance for survival. The typical American, however, waits 2 hours before calling for help.

Studies have shown that drugs that dissolve coronary blood clots during a heart attack can reduce the death rate in both men and women, although women have a higher risk of stroke from the therapy. Unfortunately, statistics show that a woman in the midst of having a heart attack receives clot-busting therapy much later than a man would.

Women coming into the hospital for a heart attack have a higher death rate and higher risk of complications. A premenopausal woman having a heart attack has twice the death rate of a similarly aged man, according to experts.

Know the warning signs and always call 911 within 5 minutes of the onset of symptoms. By acting quickly, a heart attack victim is less likely to experience cardiac arrest (where the heart stops beating).

PREVENTION TIED TO BELIEF

There is no denying that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. But preventing a disease means believing you are actually at risk -- and many women fail to see that.

Women are advised to take charge of their health by working with their doctor to address risk factors, and keep tabs on cholesterol levels, blood pressure, and lifestyle.

According to the American Heart Association, low blood levels of "good" cholesterol (high density lipoprotein, or HDL) are a stronger predictor of heart disease death in women than in men. Also, a major study showed that post-menopausal women taking hormone replacement therapy have an increased risk of heart attack and death by coronary artery disease.

WOMEN & HEART DISEASE

Source: American Heart Association/Go Red For Women

The American Heart Association has published guidelines regarding prevention of cardiovascular disease in women. Women are categorized based on their likelihood of experiencing a cardiovascular event (heart attack, stroke, death) in the next 10 years:

The guidelines recommend the following lifestyle changes:

TREATMENT RECOMMENDATIONS FOR WOMEN

Keep blood pressure under 120/80 mm Hg. Blood pressure drugs should be used when blood pressure is higher than 140/90 mm Hg. (Persons with diabetes may need medication at lower levels.)

Keep cholesterol levels under control:

Depending on a woman's level of risk (low, intermediate, high), dietary changes and medicines may be needed to control cholesterol levels.

New guidelines no longer recommend hormone replacement therapy, antioxidant supplements, or folic acid to prevent heart disease in women.

Aspirin therapy (dose 75 mg to 325 mg a day) or a drug called clopidogrel may be prescribed for women at high risk for heart disease. Aspirin therapy is recommended for women over age 65 to prevent heart attack and stroke as long as blood pressure is controlled and the benefit is likely to outweigh the risk of gastrointestinal side effects. Regular use of aspirin is not recommended for healthy women under age 65 to prevent heart attacks.

Beta blockers should be used in all women with a history of heart attack or who have chronic heart disease, unless there is a medical reason not to.

ACE inhibitors should be used in high-risk women unless there is a medical reason not to.

Angiotensin receptor blockers should be used in women with heart failure or an ejection fraction less than 40% in whom ACE inhibitors did not work.

See also:

References    Return to top

Mosca L, Banka CL, Benjamin EJ, et al. Evidence-Based Guidelines for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention in Women: 2007 Update. Circulation. 2007; Published online before print February 19, 2007.

Update Date: 2/20/2007

Updated by: Updated by A.D.A.M. Editorial Team: Greg Juhn, M.T.P.W., David R. Eltz, Kelli A. Stacy. Previously reviewed by Alan Berger, MD, Assistant Professor, Divisions of Cardiology and Epidemiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN. Review provided byVeriMed Healthcare Network. (2006)

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