Gyn
Heart Disease in Women
search
Heart Disease in Women
, Coronary Artery Disease in Women, Cardiovascular Disease in Women
See Also
Cerebrovascular Accident Risk in Women
Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection
Coronary Artery Disease
Cardiac Risk Management
Pathophysiology
Contributing Factors Specific to Women
Premature
Coronary Artery Disease
affects women to greater extent than men
Obstetric cardiovascular complication associated delayed risks (typically >10-12 years after pregnancy)
Preeclampsia
Post-pregnancy
Hypertension
(RR 3.4)
Ischemic Heart Disease
(RR 2.2, and increases to RR 7.7 if PIH at <37 weeks)
Cerebrovascular Accident
(RR 1.8)
Gestational Diabetes
Cardiovascular disease in first 10 years after pregnancy (RR 2.0)
Li (2018) Diabetes Res Clin Pract 140:324-38 [PubMed]
Obesity
Excessive weight gain during pregnancy and difficulty losing weight after pregnancy
Obesity
is associated with increased heart disease risk (RR>2) and stroke
Associated increased risks include
Obstructive Sleep Apnea
Other pregnancy related complications that increase cardiovascular disease risk
Miscarriage
(OR 1.45, increases to 2.0 in
Recurrent Miscarriage
)
Oliver-Williams (2013) Heart 99(22): 1636-44 [PubMed]
Preterm Birth (RR 1.56)
Wu (2018) J Am Heart Assoc 7(2): e007809 [PubMed]
Placental Abruption
(OR 1.8)
References
Grand (2019) Circulation 139(8): 1069-79 [PubMed]
Hormonally-related issues
Hyperandrogenic states
Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
(
PCOS
) is associated with a doubling of cardiovascular disease risk (RR 2)
de Groot (2011) Hum Reprod Update 17(4): 495-500 [PubMed]
Premature
Menopause
(before age 50 years)
Includes surgical
Menopause
or other hypoestrogenemia cause
Median time of 12 years from
Menopause
to cardiovascular disease
Increases risk of first cardiac event before age <60 years (but risk returns to baseline by age 70 years)
Zhu (2019) Lancet Public Health 4(11): e553-64 [PubMed]
Hormone Replacement Therapy
Variable cardiovascular and cerebrovascular risks
Hormone Replacement Therapy
is only recommended for symptomatic management (not for disease prevention)
Vascular conditions more common in women
Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection
(
SCAD
)
Aortic root dissection
Vasculitis
or
Collagen
vascular disease
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
(RR 50 for women with SLE age 35 to 44 years)
Manzi (1997) Am J Epidemiol 145(5): 408-15 [PubMed]
Rheumatoid Arthritis
(RR 1.5 increased cardiovascular mortality)
Avina-Zubieta (2008) Arthritis Rheum 59(12): 1690-7 [PubMed]
Stress Cardiomyopathy
Transient myocardial syndrome with extreme stress
Mental health conditions
Major Depression
(RR 2 for Cardiovascular Disease in Women)
O'Neil (2016) J Affect Disord 196:117-24 [PubMed]
Emotional Stress
Kivimaki (2018) Nat Rev Cardiol 15(4): 215-29 [PubMed]
Adverse Childhood Events
Soares (2020) Heart 106(17): 1310-16 [PubMed]
Findings
Acute
Chest Pain
Presentations in Women
See
Chest Pain
See
Acute Coronary Syndrome
Women often present atypically with
Myocardial Infarction
s
Common presenting coronary equivalents include
Dyspnea
, weakness,
Nausea
,
Palpitation
s,
Syncope
Chest Pain
or pressure may be completely absent
Results in women with ACS on average presenting 2 hours after men
Even prior stress testing may have been falsely reasuring
Non-occlusive CAD is twice as common in women
Non-occlusive
Plaque
may embed within artery wall, erode and cause acute thrombus or vasospasm
Presentations are more similar as men and women age (contrary to prior doctrine)
By age 75 years old, both men and women present without
Chest Pain
in 50% of cases
Greatest discrepancy between male and female ACS presentations are in the under age 45 cohort
Women with MI under age 45 present without
Chest Pain
in 20% of cases (contrast with 13% in men)
Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection
(
SCAD
) represents 40% of MI in women age under 50 years
References
Canto (2012) JAMA 307(8): 813-22 [PubMed]
Pepine (2015) J Am Coll Cardiol 66(17): 1918-33 +PMID:26493665 [PubMed]
Myocardial Infarction
symptoms in younger women are often atypical
Chest Pain
Back, neck,
Shoulder
, or
Abdominal Pain
Shortness of Breath
Nausea
or
Vomiting
Cold sweats
Fatigue
Weakness
Anxiety
Anorexia
Evaluation
See
Cardiac Risk Assessment
ASCVD Risk Estimator
https://tools.acc.org/ascvd-risk-estimator-plus/#!/calculate/estimate/
ASCVD Risk Estimator,
Framingham Score
and NCEP III guidelines underestimate risk in women
Does not account for
Obesity
, inactivity,
Hypertriglyceridemia
,
Family History
Women are under-represented in cardiovascular research studies
Reduced non-invasive stress
Test Sensitivity
in women
Women often have single vessel disease
Women more often fail to reach a maximal stress test (>5 Mets are required)
ST depression and
Chest Pain
with
Exercise
are not good predictors in women
Management
See
Cardiac Risk Management
Gene
ral monitoring and management
Blood Glucose
Lipid
Panel
Blood Pressure
Healthy Body weight (and BMI reduction in
Obesity
)
Tobacco Cessation
(and other
Substance Abuse
management)
Exercise
Program (150 minutes moderate
Exercise
per week)
Healthy Diet
(e.g.
Plant Forward Diet
)
Major Depression
screening and management
Pregnancy related complication monitoring
Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy
Gestational Hypertension
should normalize by 12 weeks post-partum
Evaluate and manage as
Hypertension
if persists
Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
Screen for
Diabetes Mellitus
at 12 weeks postpartum
See
Gestational Diabetes Management
for postpartum protocol
Cardiovascular Risk
-Based
Cardiovascular Risk
estimation based on ASCVD Risk Estimator (see above)
Follow general monitoring and management measures as above
ASCVD Risk 5 to 20%
Consider contributing risks in women as above (e.g. pregnancy) and general
Cardiac Risk Factor
s
Consider
Statin
(esp. for ASCVD risk >7.5 to 10%)
Consider
Aspirin
81 mg daily (ASCVD risk >=10% and age 40 to 59 years)
ASCVD Risk >20%
Statin
Consider
Aspirin
81 mg daily (age 40 to 59 years)
References
Westfall (2023) Am Fam Physician 108(6): 595-604 [PubMed]
Type your search phrase here