Why women are affected differently
by a heart attack!
The American Heart Association (AHA) has for the first
time issued a scientific statement on female heart attacks,
underscoring knowledge gaps and outlining the priority steps needed to better
understand and treat heart disease in
women. The statement chaired by Dr. Laxmi Mehta, a cardiologist at the Ohio
State University’s Wexner Medical Centre, compiles the newest data on symptoms,
treatments and the types of heart attacks among women. ‘Over the last 10 years
or so, we’ve learned that women’s hearts are different than men’s in some
significant ways and while that’s helped reduce mortality, there’s much more to
know,’ said Mehta, who is also director of Ohio State’s women’s cardiovascular
health programme.
Cardiovascular
disease is the leading cause of death for women globally. While
men and women both experience chest pain as a primary heart attack symptom,
women often have atypical, vague symptoms without the usual chest pain such as
palpitations, pain in the back, shoulder or jaw, even anxiety, sweating or
indigestion. Some women may only experience shortness of breath, nausea,
vomiting or flu-like symptoms. ‘These symptoms can be very challenging for the
patient and the medical profession. Women tend to under recognise or deny them.
When they do present to the emergency department, it is important for these symptoms
to be triaged appropriately as potential heart problems,’ Mehta emphasised.
Delay in seeking treatment is more common among women than
men. The authors report several factors can lead to a delay in seeking help for
heart attack symptoms. ‘Living alone, interpreting symptoms as temporary or not
urgent, consulting with a doctor or family member first and fear of
embarrassment if the symptoms aren’t serious are some of them,’ the authors
noted. ‘We don’t yet clearly understand why women have different causes and
symptoms of heart attacks,’ Mehta said. ‘Women are more complex, there are more
biological variables such as hormonal fluctuations. That’s why more research is
needed,’ she said. Social, environmental and community differences also play a
role in how women’s treatment outcomes differ from men’s. More women have depression related
to heart disease, which can hinder their treatment.
Women less often complete cardiac rehabilitation due to
competing work and family responsibilities and lack of support. Frankly, women
are great at nagging their spouses, so they make sure their partner takes their
medications, goes to cardiac rehab, eats better and sees the doctor.
‘Unfortunately, many women don’t make their own personal health their priority,
which contributes to more favourable outcomes in men versus women after a heart
attack,’ Mehta noted.
Source: www.thehealthsite.com
28.01.2016
Your attitude is your altitude.
It determines
how high you fly
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