Health
Cardiovascular
disease: An equal opportunity killer
Feb. 1, 2007
Cardiovascular
disease has been seen traditionally as an affliction
for middle-aged or elderly men. Turning 40 and trudging off to the
doctor for a check-up so you could rest assured that you won't drop
dead during a weekly game of pick up hockey has been almost a rite of
middle-aged passage for men.
Signs you're having a heart attack
- Sudden
pain in chest, neck, jaw, shoulders, arms or
back. The pain can feel like squeezing, heaviness, pressure, burning or
tightness.
- Problems
breathing.
- Indigestion.
- Vomiting,
nausea.
- Clammy
skin.
Back in
1973, heart disease and stroke killed 45,404 men, according
to figures from Statistics Canada. Thirty years later, the number of
male deaths had fallen by 19 per cent to 37,004.
On the
other hand, in 1973, 34,924 women died from heart disease or
stroke. By 2003, the number of women who died from heart disease or
stroke almost equaled the number of male deaths: 36,823.
Men still
outnumber women when it comes to dying from heart attacks,
but the gap has narrowed dramatically since 1973, when twice as many
men died from heart attacks as women. In the next 30 years, male deaths
dropped by 49 per cent to 10,643 while female deaths fell by 24 per
cent to 8,019.
"It's a
real concern that women's heart health has not kept pace
with men's," said Dr. Beth Abramson, cardiologist and spokesperson for
the Heart and Stroke Foundation.
Signs you're having a stroke
- Weakness,
numbness or tingling in face, arms or legs, especially on one side of
the body.
- Trouble
speaking or understanding speech.
- Sudden
blurring, double vision or loss of vision.
- Sudden
severe headache.
- Dizziness,
loss of balance.
"Women are
living like men and dying like men. We have seen that rates
for dying from heart disease and stroke are higher at every age and
stage for a woman than a man."
The numbers
all around have been getting far better for men — but women
have not been seeing the same improvements.
Abramson
says there are several reasons, including:
- Women
are less likely than men to be treated by a specialist.
- Women
are less likely to receive treatments such as angioplasty or cardiac
bypass surgery.
- Fewer
women than men are referred to cardiologists.
"For years,
it was assumed that this occurred because women were
older and tended to be sicker when they were hospitalized," Abramson
told a news conference.
"But even
when you control for age and other health conditions, a
woman's risk of dying within the first 30 days is 16 per cent higher
than a man's for heart attack and 11 per cent higher for stroke."
In-hospital heart attack mortality
rate per 100 heart attacks 1997/98-1999/2000
| Age group |
Women |
Men |
| 20-49 |
3.1 |
1.6 |
| 50-64 |
5.9 |
3.9 |
| 65-74 |
12.6 |
10.3 |
| 75+ |
24.4 |
22.2 |
| All ages (20+) |
16.7 |
9.9 |
| Source: Canadian
Cardiovascular Outcomes Research Team |
Abramson
adds that a lot of women just aren't aware of the risks
they face — and men are even less aware of the risks their
spouses may
face. A national survey by the Heart and Stroke Foundation found that
53 per cent of men believed that the number of heart and stroke deaths
was somewhat or a lot less in women than in men.
"Even
younger women need to go in for an exam and talk about issues
beyond gynecological care. If we address risk at an annual exam, maybe
we can prevent some of this."
The foundation has made several
recommendations to try to bridge the gap, including:
- More
research into how heart disease and stroke affect women differently
than men.
- Tailoring
health-care services to women's needs.
- People
need to be more proactive about their own health, including
eating a balanced diet that is lower in saturated and trans fats.
- People
need to become more aware of their risk for heart disease and stroke.
But the
different ways in which cardiovascular disease affect men
and women may not just be differences in approaches to care. A study
out of Boston has found that the fine grit in polluted air boosts the
risks of cardiovascular disease in older women much more powerfully
than scientists previously thought.
It has long
been known that fine grit — also called particulates
—
in polluted air contributes to lung and heart disease, with women
possibly more susceptible than men because of smaller blood vessels and
other biological differences. But this study found that problems were
several times higher than a previous study by the American Cancer
Society.
The tiny
bits of grit are too small to see, but collectively they form that haze
that settles over large industrial areas.
Meanwhile,
a Quebec study has found that while cholesterol-lowering
statin drugs reduce the risk of death after a heart attack, the effects
seem to be greater for men than women. The researchers suggested the
reason may be that statins are processed differently in men and women.
Statins are
among the best-selling drugs on the planet.
|