|
Heart disease doesn't discriminate. It is the leading
killer of men and women. But when it comes to diagnosing and treating
it, there is a gender gap. Women with heart attacks are more likely
to die than men...and that's not just older women. Women of all
ages are more likely to die. According to one Israeli study that
adjusted for age, size and other factors, the death risk for women
was 1.7 times that of men.
During the past decade, heart attack survival has
improved greatly thanks to thrombolytics (clot-buster medication)
like TPA and streptokinase. But how often do women get these drugs?
In one Washington state study, of 1,078 subjects screened for TPA
eligibility, 39 percent of the women were too old, 59 percent had
nondiagnostic electrocardiograms and 30 percent came to the hospitals
too late. Overall, only 16 percent of the women screened were eligible
for TPA, compared with 25 percent of men. Of those eligible women,
55 percent received the drug, compared with 78 percent of the men.
It was not clear as to whether the difference was
due to patient or physician refusal, failure of emergency room staff
to offer thrombolytic therapy or to other causes. One way women
can get the benefit of clot busting drugs is to get to the hospital
quicker. Studies have shown that women with chest pain wait too
long before heading to the emergency room. (Thrombolytics are 50
percent effective if given within the first hour of having a heart
attack but drop to only 20 percent effectiveness if given 2-6 hours
later). But does clot busting work better in men than in women?
Large Studies have found that women's survival improves with these
drugs, but not to the same extent as men, though it is not known
why.
Exercise Stress Tests
Treadmills as a screening tool for diagnosing heart disease are
accurate in men but not so in women. In one study comparing the
accuracy of treadmill tests in women and men, misleading treadmill
results occurred in 35 percent of the women studied. When combined
with nuclear imaging using thallium (a low-dose radioisotope), the
accuracy rate improved in women, provided the interpreter was trained
to take breast tissue and valve plane artifacts into account.
Abnormal treadmill tests have been related to phases
of the menstrual cycle and to oral contraceptive use, implicating
sex hormones as a factor. It may be estrogen's effect on cardiocytes
- the cells of the heart muscle. Another explanation for the variations
in test results may be the effect of catecholamines (stress hormones
i.e. adrenaline) on the vasomotor tone and the higher prevalence
of mitral valve prolapse among women.
Pharmacologic Stress Tests
Stress tests induced by drugs (dipyridamole, adenosine or dobutamine)
rather than with exercise may actually be preferable in women since
many elderly women cannot endure the physical demands of treadmill
testing and sub-optimal heart rates are achieved. Again, the use
of thallium improves the accuracy of this stress test as well. Either
stress test when combined with echocardiography is more accurate
for diagnosing heart disease in women with comparable results to
nuclear imaging. With a skillful, experienced technician, the graphic
images of the functioning heart muscle can be accurately interpreted.
By using sound waves, echocardiography has the added advantage of
avoiding breast artifacts (inaccurate readings due to breast tissue).
Angiography
Angiography is a dye study using the cardiac catheterization procedure
with x-rays to view blocked vessels. It remains the gold standard
for diagnosing coronary artery disease, but, unlike nuclear imaging,
it has its risks. Women with heart attacks or unstable or stable
angina are less likely to be referred for angiography than are men
with the same diagnoses. It is debatable whether this reflects under
use of angiography in women or overuse in men.
Surgical Intervention
When it comes to balloon angioplasty, women should do as well as
men but they don't. More women die after angioplasty and their complication
rates are higher then for men (The age adjusted death rate for women
is 4 times that of men, according to the American Heart Association).
Though women undergoing angioplasty are generally
older than the men - and more likely to have other conditions like
diabetes and high blood pressure - gender remained an independent
predictor of risk, according to a study by the National Heart, Lung
and Blood Institute. The track record on bypass surgery isn't any
more encouraging. More women die from bypass than men...and that's
not because they are older at the time of surgery.
In one study of 6,630 subjects, the death rate for
women was significantly higher in all age groups. Four women undergoing
bypass surgery died for every man in the 40 to 49 year group. In
the 50 to 59 group, it was three women for every man. One possible
explanation is women's smaller size. In a study done at the Cleveland
Clinic, the death rates for women and men were nearly three to one.
When matched for age, severity of chest pains and
extent of disease, the risk was two to one. But once body size was
factored, gender was no longer a predictor. Another explanation
could be their poorer health status at the time of the surgery.
One study found that women were more seriously ill compared with
men at the time of surgery. This could mean that women are referred
at a later stage of their disease, subjecting them to more risk.
But one study from Duke University concluded that, although women
with heart disease were less likely in general to be referred for
bypass, among patients with higher likelihood of cardiac death,
women and men were referred with equal frequency.
Some groups of women are more likely to develop cardiovascular
disease than other groups. Black women are 24 percent more likely
to die of coronary heart disease than white women, and their death
rate for stroke is 83 percent higher. Older women have a greater
chance of developing cardiovascular diseases than younger women,
partly because the tendency to have heart-related problems increases
with age. Older women, for example, are more likely to develop high
blood pressure and high blood cholesterol levels, to be diabetic,
to be overweight, and to exercise less than younger women. Also,
after menopause, women are more apt to get cardiovascular diseases,
in part because their bodies produce less estrogen. Women who have
had early menopause, either naturally or by means of hysterectomy,
are twice as likely to develop coronary heart disease as women of
the same age who have not begun menopause.
In conclusion, coronary artery disease is the leading
cause of death in women. More than twice as many women die from
cardiovascular disease as from all forms of cancer combined. Evaluation
for suspected coronary disease differs in women because of frequently
misleading results provided by treadmill testing without imaging.
Gender differences have been observed in treatment practices, but
since more is not necessarily better in this setting, the optimal
approach for women has yet to be established.
Opportunities remain for the physician to work in
partnership with the patient for early intervention in women with
symptoms of coronary artery disease, including responding to chest
pain.
Panic Attack or Heart Attack
- Heart disease in women is often mistaken for panic attack with
shortness of
breath, anxiety and indigestion.
- Only by having testing including an EKG can a correct diagnosis
be made.
- When in doubt about symptoms, seek care without delay to rule
out heart disease.
When a woman experiences a panic attack, the body reacts by producing
stress hormones. Symptoms such as chest pain, shortness of breath,
pounding, rapid heartbeat (palpitations), sweating and a feeling
of impending doom may occur. Transient turning in the chest, dizziness,
weakness, nausea and severe indigestion along with a sense of panic
are other common symptoms. Both panic attack and heart attack have
similar symptoms because they trigger the body’s "fight
or flight" response, but, if symptoms last
for more than 2-3 minutes or the pain leaves and then returns, it
could be a heart attack. Only by having testing can a correct diagnosis
be made. |