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Heart
Attacks in Women
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Counselor,
Cardiovascular
disease (CVD) is the
leading cause of death in the United States, accounting for
approximately
500,000 deaths each year. More women in the United States die of heart
disease than of any other cause, and one form of heart disease,
myocardial infarction, is responsible for the majority of these deaths.
In every year since 1984 it has claimed the lives of more women than
men.
The mortality rate for women following a heart attack is 8% in the
first
month; more than 2-5 times higher than men. Moreover, women who survive
myocardial infarction are at high risk for repeated heart attacks and
heart
failure.
Women
are more likely to have diabetes
mellitus, congestive heart failure (CHF), and hypertension prior to
myocardial infarction (MI) compared with men. Women also experience
differences in pathophysiology of myocardial infarction, access to
treatment,
and response to treatment.
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Pathophysiology:
An
acute
myocardial infarction is caused by a sudden blockage of the coronary
artery, responsible for feeding the heart muscle with oxygen. The
blockage is typically caused by a plaque of cholesterol freeing from
the atery wall and occluding the artery. Without oxygen the muscle
becomes acutely injured and the patient experiences a myocardial
infarction or heart attack. The objective of treatment, then, is
either to open the vessel, or make the blood thin enough to pass
around the occlusion.
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Treatment:
Several
treatments are available for an acute myocardial infarction, the most
notable of which are tPA, a powerful blood-thinning agent, and PTCA
or "angioplasty," an intervention using a guide wire and a
balloon to open the closed artery. Both interventions are
time-sensitive; the longer the delay, the worse the long-term heart
function and the higher the mortality. These treatments should be
delivered within 2 hours for maximum efficacy.
The
introduction of
thrombolytic therapy, the most commonly employed method of
reperfusion for the treatment of an acute MI, has resulted in a 25%
to 35% reduction in short-term mortality. Unfortunately, women
presenting with an acute MI are at greater risk of dying or
developing complications. such as intracerebral bleeding, from
treatment with thrombolytic therapy.
One
large clinical trial,
revealed women wait significantly longer to receive life-saving
therapy. They don't receive tPA as often as men, they don't respond
as well, and they have a 15% higher mortality following an MI. Women
also had more complications including shock, CHF , serious bleeding,
and reocclusion and they have more complicating factors such as
hypertension, diabetes and smoking. They also delay their own care,
waiting 12 hours or more in 20% of cases.
Delays
in seeking care and
receiving treatment may be explained by different symptoms in women.
In one study, women had less chest pain than men, presenting instead
with jaw pain, neck pain, back pain, shortness of breath and nausea,
with 25% experiencing no chest pain whatsoever. Many had no
diaphoresis or cold sweats, a classic hallmark of myocardial
infarction. Their EKG's often didn't show definitive evidence of
heart problems.
Women
are more likely to go
to their primary care provider, who is less likely to be aggressive
with treatment and testing. They also receive aspirin and beta
blockers less often than men after myocardial infarction.
Direct
angioplasty (PTCA)
is commonly used as an alternative to thrombolytic therapy for
treatment of an acute MI. Benefits from PTCA include lower early
mortality, fewer strokes, reinfarction, or recurrent ischemia, and
shorter hospital stays. But data from the national hospital discharge
survey show that women are half as likely to receive invasive cardiac
procedures as men, despite having greater functional disability from
angina.
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Medical/Legal
Concerns:
Both
patients and health care providers should be educated about atypical
symptoms and possible gender differences in presenting
characteristics of myocardial infarction.
Delay
in definitive
treatment substantially increases both mortality and long-term heart
function. Physicians should treat acute infarctions aggressively with
either tPA or PTCA. In institutions where PTCA is readily available,
women with a severe MI should be referred for direct PTCA, because
they have higher complications with tPA.
"Lack
of significant
chest pain may be a major reason why women have more unrecognized
heart attacks than men or are mistakenly diagnosed and discharged
from emergency departments," said Dr. McSweeney, author of a
large study examining MI symptoms in women "Many clinicians
still consider chest pain as the primary symptom of a heart
attack." The investigators reported that 43% of the women had no
pain with acute infarction; instead, these women often described
chest aching, chest tightness, or chest pressure, experiencing it
primarily in the back and high chest. Other acute symptoms were
shortness of breath in 58%, weakness in 55%, unusual fatigue in 43%,
cold sweat in 39%, and dizziness in 39%.
Not
only do physicians miss
the warning signs and symptoms of heart attacks in women, but women
typically ignored their own warning symptoms. Warning symptoms
occurred in 95% of women, including unusual fatigue in 70%, sleep
disturbance in 48%, shortness of breath in 42%, indigestion in 39%,
and anxiety in 35%. Only 30% of women reported chest discomfort as a
warning symptom, and they described it as aching, tightness, or
pressure rather than as pain.
Women
need to seek medical
care to determine the cause of suspicious symptoms, especially if
they have known cardiovascular risks such as smoking, high blood
pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, obesity or a family history of
heart disease. Physicians need to be aware of the differences in
presentation between men and women.
Physicians
should take care
to review the warning symptoms and signs of women presenting with
atypical pain, pressure, shortness of breath, dizziness or unusual
fatigue, and should have a very low threshold for further diagnostic
testing. Women at higher risk who have known significant family
history or other complicating medical diseases should undergo routine
testing for coronary blockage similar to their male counterparts.
Physicians should not hesitate to perform or refer patients to
invasive diagnostic procedures because they assume the patients' risk
for heart attacks are lessened or because the symptoms and signs are
atypical. They should be aggressive about utilizing pharmalogical
therapy in their patients with known disease to prevent further
incidents.
A
heightened awareness and
aggressive approach by both the patient and the clinician will
hopefully reduce the high mortality of this deadly and often
overlooked disease in women.
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