Valantine explores new views on women’s
cardiac risk
By MITZI BAKER
The first female-specific recommendations for
preventive cardiology were published in 1999, but since then a lot
more has been uncovered about warding off heart disease in women.
Hannah Valantine, MD, professor of cardiovascular medicine,
reviewed the latest guidelines in a women’s health journal
club meeting held at Fairchild Auditorium Feb. 25.
The gathering, hosted by Linda Giudice, MD, PhD, the Stanley
McCormick Memorial Professor, addressed guidelines published last
month in the American Heart Association’s journal
Circulation. These guidelines point to evidence-based
methods for preventing cardiovascular disease in women who have a
broad range of risks for the condition.
Valantine focused on coronary heart disease, which accounts for
more than half of the deaths due to cardiovascular disease. She
emphasized the gender differences that relate to the prevalence and
the overall mortality, which is substantially higher in women than
in men.
Hannah Valantine (left)
finishes speaking to the crowd on emerging views related to the
risk of heart disease among women. New guidelines seem to raise
more questions on the subject than they answer. Valantine was
introduced by obstetrics and gynecology professor Linda Giudice
(right). Photo: Mitzi
Baker
She summarized what she called “terrible statistics”
related to women and heart disease: One in seven women in her 60s
will be affected by the disease, as will one in four women in her
70s.
But this is not a problem entirely of old age, she said. More than
20,000 women under age 65 will die each year in the United States
from heart attacks. Of these, one-third will be under 55.
More men than women are diagnosed with heart attack; however,
Valantine said, people need to realize that since the 1980s, there
has been a slow but steady decline in the death rate for men, but
not so for women, for whom the rate has slightly increased over the
same period.
Why are men and women seemingly following separate paths to heart
disease? Valantine outlined a number of possibilities, including
differences in risk factors, diagnosis, clinical outcomes following
a heart attack, responses to prevention, awareness of the problem
and access to care. Some points Valantine made include:
• The definitive diagnosis by noninvasive testing of women is
for some reason more challenging than in men. A simple treadmill
test without imaging studies is “really questionable ...
it’s just a toss of a coin,” she said.
• Although the most common symptom of heart attack in both
women and men is chest pain, women are more likely to have atypical
symptoms such as neck, abdominal or shoulder pains or generalized
fatigue.
• Hormone therapy and antioxidant vitamin supplements are not
recommended for cardiovascular disease prevention.
• C-reactive protein, a marker of general nonspecific
inflammation, has been shown in many studies to be more predictive
of cardiovascular disease than LDL cholesterol levels, but the data
for its use as a screening tool are not definitive. The authors of
this work suggest there should be more attention to conventional
risk factors until there are more studies.
• There is twice as great a risk of death in women following
coronary artery bypass graft and coronary artery stenting, despite
the initial rates of success being equal. “I think what is
true is that acute interventions are very helpful and they work,
but we are still questioning why the outcomes differ,” she
said.
Although there were nearly 7,000 studies summarized in the
Circulation review, she noted there is little known today beyond
the awareness that men and women have a different experience when
it comes to heart disease.
But the basics of prevention hold true, she said. Smoking is the
leading cause for coronary heart disease in women under 50. Obesity
and diabetes are epidemic problems that are even greater risk
factors in women; the vast majority of people with diabetes will
die of a heart attack. Drugs and diet can control the major risk
factors of high blood pressure and lipid levels. Exercise improves
all factors known to affect heart disease.
“Something that appears over and over again is that the women
in these studies are older, have more diabetes, have more
hypertension and heart failure at the time of presentation,”
said Valantine.
“The risk factors are already there, so regardless of what
you can do acutely, we need to focus on prevention
efforts.”
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