Racial and Gender Differences in Cardiovascular Disease Flashcards
1
Q
Heart Disease
- Gender
- Race
- Risk factors
A
- Gender
- Leading cause of death, esp in women
- Accounted for over 290,000 deaths in women in 2009
- 1 in 4 women will die from it
- Women are 6x more likely to die of heart disease than breast cancer
- Incidence in women (>75yo) lags behind men by 5-10 years (65-74yo)
- Race
- Black & asian/pacific islander deaths from CHD > white, hispanic, or american indian deaths from CHD
- Risk factors for CHD: lowest in whites & asians
- Odds for multiple risk factors: greatest in black & native american women
- Risk factors
- 80% of women have >1 risk factor when presenting w/ heart disease
- Obesity: present in >1/3 of women w/ CHD
- Diabetes: stronger risk factor for CHD / acute MI in women than men
- Women have a higher prevalence of diabetes mellitus than men
- Absolute rates of CVD in diabetes are higher in men than women, but DM accounts for a larger proportion of CVD that occurs in women than men
2
Q
Women vs. Men
- Cardiac anatomy
- Cardiac function
- Physiology
- Coronary artery size
A
- Cardiac anatomy
- Smaller LV mass, wall thickness, LA dimension, & left end diastolic size
- Cardiac function
- Stroke volume: reduced
- Ejection fraction: slightly higher
- Pulse: faster
- Physiology
- Reduced sympathetic activity
- Enhanced parasympathetic activity
- Decreased levels of norepinephrine
- Coronary artery size
- Smaller coronary artery size
- Anything that further reduces teh diameter of the artery (stenosis, spasm, dysfunction) has seroius adverse effects
3
Q
Plaque Distribution, Disruption, & Healing
- Plaque distribution
- Men
- Women
- Way in which plaque is disrupted
- Men & older women
- Younger women
- Women
- Way in which atherosclerotic lesions heal
- Men
- Women
A
- Plaque distribution
- Men: focal areas of plaque in their coronary arteries w/ single segmental stenosis
- Women: diffuse plaque buildup & narrowing throughout the length of their coronary arteries
- Way in which plaque is disrupted
- Men & older women: plaque rupture
- Occurs w/ a large necrotic core & disrupted fibrous cap infiltrated by macrophages & lymphocytes
- Younger women: plaque erosion
- A fibrous cap is absent at the plaque erosion site
- The exposed intima consists predominantly of smooth muscle & proteoglycans
- Women: distal microvascular embolization
- In the setting of a fatal epicardial thrombosis
- Men & older women: plaque rupture
- Way in which atherosclerotic lesions heal
- Men: negative remodeling
- Inward remodeling of vasculature & sometimes artery narrowing
- Women: positive remodeling
- Outward remodeling away from the lesion
- Men: negative remodeling
4
Q
Estrogen
- Effects on cholesterol
- Effects on endothelial function
- Effects on women
A
- Effects on cholesterol
- Decrease LDL
- Increase HDl
- Increase triglycerides
- Effects on endothelial function
- Increase NO availability –> increase vasodilation
- Increase endothelial growth + decrease smooth muscle growth –> inhibit healthy repsonse to vessel injury
- Effects on women
- Estrogen affects women’s reproductive & CV systems
- Women are protected by estrogen when they’re younger
- Menopause –> lose estrogen –> higher risk for heart disease
- Higher cholesterol & LDL
- Lower HDL & triglycerides
- Less vadodilation in response to NO
- Less inhibition of healthy response to vessel injury
5
Q
Risk Stratification in Women: High Risk
A
- Atherosclerotic disease
- Coronary heart disease
- Heart attack
- Blockages in coronary arteries
- Peripheral arterial disease
- Peripheral arterial bypass
- Blockages in vasculature
- Cerebrovascular disease
- Stoke
- Carotid endarterectomy or stenting
- Abdmoinal aortic aneurysm
- Coronary heart disease
- Diabetes mellitus
- End stage or chronic kidney disease
- 10 year Framingham CV disease risk > 10%
6
Q
Risk Stratification in Women: At Risk
A
- Cigarette smoking
- HTN
- Dyslipidemia
- FH of premature CVD in a 1st degree relative
- Obesity
- Physical inactivity
- Poor diet
- Metabolic syndrome (>3)
- Obesity
- High triglycerides
- Low HDL
- High BP
- High fasting glucose
- Advanced subclinical atherosclerosis
- Poor exercise capacity on treadmill test
- Systemic autoimmune collagen vascular disease
- Systemic lupus erythematous
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Pregnancy-induced HTN, gestational diabetes, pre-eclampsia
- (Thoracic radiation used to treat breast cancer)
7
Q
Risk Stratification in Women: Ideal Risk
A
- Total cholesterol < 200
- BP < 120/80
- Fasting blood sugar < 100
- BMI < 25
- Never smoked or quit > 12 months ago
- Physicla activity levels at goal
- Appropriate diet
- Make up <5% of women
8
Q
Lifestyle Recommendations for Women
- Smoking cessation
- Physical activity
- Low risk diet
- Depression treatment
A
- Smoking cessation
- Counseling
- Nicotine replacement (patch, gum, lozenge, inhaler)
- Pharmacotherapy (buproprion, varenicline)
- Physical activity
- Moderate exercise 150 min/week or vigorous exercise 75 min/week
- Muscle strengthening 2 days/week
- Moderate to intense activity 60-90 min/day for women needing to lose weight
- Low risk diet
- High in vegetables, fruit, whole grains, & fish
- Low in saturated fats & salts
- No more than 1 alcoholic drink / day
- Depression treatment
- Screen & treat
9
Q
Women & Aspirin
- Aspirin therapy
- Clopidogrel
- Medications that shouldn’t be used for prevention of CV disease
A
- Aspirin therapy
- For women w/ a prior history of heart attack or stroke to decreae risk of recurrence
- Contraversial for stroke/MI prevention in women who are at risk or healthy
- Beneficial: >65yo, controlled BP, & benefit of prevention > risk of GI bleeding & hemorrhagic stroke
- Not beneficial: <65yo, low risk or healthy women
- Clopidogrel
- For high risk women intolerant or allergic to aspirin
- Medications that shouldn’t be used for prevention of CV disease
- Antioxidant supplements
- Folic acid supplements
- Selective estrogen-receptor modulators (SERMs)
- Estrogen hormone therapy
10
Q
Acute Coronary Syndrome
- Most common ACS symptom for both men & women
- Atypical ACS symptoms in women
- Gender biases in treating women
- Deaths within 1 year after first MI
- Deaths within 5 years after first MI
A
- Most common ACS symptom for both men & women
- Chest pain
- Atypical ACS symptoms in women
- Arm, back, shoulder, neck, & jaw pain
- Shortness of breath
- Nausea
- Unexplained fatigue
- Palpitations
- Gender biases in treating women
- Develop more angina, HF, & arrhythmias after a heart attack
- Less likely to have an EKG, cardiac monitoring, & cardiac enzymes drawn
- Less cholesterol screening & therapies
- Less use of heparin, beta blockers, & aspirin during AMI
- Less antiplatelet therapy for secondary prevention
- Fewer referrals to cardiac rehabilitation
- Fewer ICDs
- Deaths within 1 year after first MI
- _<_45yo: women > men
- 45-64yo: black men > white women > black women > white men
- _>_65yo: white & black women > white & black men
- Deaths within 5 years after first MI
- _<_45yo: women > men
- 45-64yo: black women > black men > white women > white men
- _>_65yo: white women > white men
11
Q
Chest Pain w/ “Normal Coronary Arteries”
- Coronary arteries in men vs. women w/ chest pain
- Women w/ chest pain & normal coronary arteries
- Pathophysiology of chest pain w/ normal coronary arteries
- Treatment of women w/ chest pain & normal coronary arteries
A
- Coronary arteries in men vs. women w/ chest pain
- Men: less likely to have normal coronary arteries
- Women: more likely to have normal coronary arteries
- Women w/ chest pain & normal coronary arteries
- At higher risk & have increased rates of cardiac events
- Non-CAD women w/ persistent chest pain are more likely to have CV events (non-fatal MIs, strokes, CHF, CV deaths) than those w/o chest pain
- Pathophysiology of chest pain w/ normal coronary arteries
- Coronary artery vasospasms
- Artery spasm –> decreased luminal area –> decreased distal blood flow
- Endothelial dysfunction
- Vasoactive stimuli –> abnormal blood flow
- Increased inflammatory states (high hs-CRP)
- Reduced substrate of the vasodilator NO
- Abnormal response to NO or endothelin
- High levels of endogenous NO inhibitors (asymmetric dimethylarginine, ADMA)
- Autonomic abnormalities
- Increased sympathetic tone –> small vessels that are sensitive to vasoconstriction &/or vasospasm
- Enhanced pain sensitivity
- Electrical stimulation of atrium & ventricle –> chest pain
- Injection of contrast media into LAD –> pain
- Increased activation of regional cerebral cortex during dobutamine stress echo
- Estrogen deficiency
- Impaired endothelial dysfunction
- Poor pain modulation
- Coronary artery vasospasms
- Treatment of women w/ chest pain & normal coronary arteries
- Aggressive lifestyle changes
- Risk factor management
- Low dose aspirin
- Statin therapy for dyslipidemia