Scroll Up
Scroll Down
Play Play Play Play
Unregistered User
Click here if this is not your Personal Edition
 
Contact Us | Free E-Mail Updates | Journals | Register a colleague
 
 
Angina Pectoris/MI
 
   
 
SEARCH   
Doctor's Guide Free CME
Medline
Congress Resource Centre
 

 EXPLORE :
   Most Read News
 All News  All News
 All Webcasts / CME  All Webcasts / CME
 All Cases  All Cases
 Congress Resource Centre  Congress Resource Centre
 All Medical Resources  All Medical Resources
 Medical  My Personal Edition



Warning | Privacy

 

 
 Recent news - Angina Pectoris/MI
    Cyclic Combined HRT Regimen via Patch, Gel Associated With Decreased Risk of MI - (DGNews)
    TopAbstracts in Angina Pectoris/MI 10/01/2008 - (DGNews)
    Drug-eluting or bare-metal stents for acute myocardial infarction - (N Engl J Med)
    Inhaled anticholinergics and risk of major adverse cardiovascular events in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis - (JAMA)
    Anticholinergics May Increase Risk of Cardiovascular Death, MI, or Stroke in COPD Patients - (DGNews)

    News archive

     Recent webcasts/CME - Angina Pectoris/MI
    • Late Breaking Data From Clinical Trials on RAAS Inhibition
    • Hyperglycemia in Acute Coronary Syndromes
      Do Angiotensin Receptor Blockers Increase the Risk of Myocardial Infarction?
      Non-STEMI
      Importance of Reducing Ischemic Time for Optimal Treatment of ST Elevation MI

      Webcasts/CME archive

       Recent cases - Angina Pectoris/MI
        Effort Angina in a Patient with Advanced Coronary Artery Disease. Role Played by Coronary Angiography, IVUS and Cardiac CT: Case Report
        A Case of Demand Ischemia from Phendimetrazine: A Case Report
        Acute Myocardial Infarction in an 18 Year Old South Indian Girl with Familial Hypercholesterolemia: A Case Report
        The Effect of a Large Proximal Haemodialysis A-V Fistula on Weaning off Cardiopulmonary Bypass
        Diagnostic Uncertainty of Takotusbo Cardiomyopathy Presenting as Acute Myocardial Infarction in a Woman with Cardiovascular Risk Factors Hijacked at Gunpoint: A Case Report

        Cases archive
          




        my personal edition > angina pectoris/mi > news
        divider

          E-Mail this DGNews to a colleague

        DGNews


        Women Receive Less Aggressive Treatment for Chest Pain and Heart Attacks than Men, Study Finds

        Difference in treatment causes women more ongoing heart problems

        WASHINGTON, DC -- November 10, 2005 -- Women with one of a group of heart problems known as acute coronary syndromes (ACS) are almost one-third less likely to receive invasive treatments when compared with men with the same conditions, according to data from an international study of more than 12,000 people. Consequently, women are about one-sixth more likely than men to suffer additional chest pain or other recurrent heart problems, reports the new paper, to be published in the Nov. 15 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

        "The results of our study showed that women, especially high-risk women, aren't receiving the recommended treatment for patients with acute coronary syndromes," said Sonia S. Anand, MD, PhD, FRCPc, associate professor of medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, and lead author of the paper. "All women should be considered for these types of procedures, as are men, when they come to the hospital with these conditions."

        Dr. Anand, who holds the May Cohen Eli Lilly Chair in Women's Health Research at McMaster, spoke today at the American Medical Association's 24th annual Science Reporters Conference in Washington, D.C. She and her coauthors analyzed data from the Clopidogrel in Unstable Angina Evaluation (CURE) trial, a study of 4,836 women and 7,726 men with ACS, a group of conditions that includes angina, or chest pain, and certain types of heart attacks.

        The patients, from 28 countries, were recruited between December 1998 and September 2000. Dr. Anand and her research team assessed their status when they were discharged, one month later, and then one to three more times at three-month intervals.

        The problem started, Dr. Anand said, when women with ACS weren't sent for diagnostic tests, such as coronary angiography, during which physicians use a catheter to inject dye into the arteries to identify blockages.

        Overall, 15% fewer women underwent angiography, and 20% fewer high-risk women than high-risk men had the test. "It wasn't that once the disease was documented, physicians ignored women and didn't send them to have operations--they did," Dr. Anand said.

        "But the initial trigger to send them for the catheterization was much lower for women compared to men."

        Therefore, the rates of invasive procedures that generally follow angiography were also lower among women than men. Women were 35% less likely to undergo angioplasty or coronary artery bypass graft surgery, treatments that reopen blocked blood vessels or reroute blood through newly created arteries.

        "Even high-risk women received fewer procedures," Dr. Anand said. "Although there wasn't a difference in their death, heart attack or stroke rates, we certainly found that women returned more often to the hospital complaining of chest discomfort over the nine months of follow-up. It may be that because they received fewer procedures and therefore interventions, they still have ongoing coronary disease."

        The paper raises more questions than it answers about the causes of these gender differences, Dr. Anand said. "Maybe women refuse procedures more than men, maybe there is a bias that causes physicians to feel that men are high-risk so they should have procedures and not women, or maybe women have different chest pain symptoms than men," she said. "There are a lot of potential explanations as to why women wouldn't get the same number of procedures."

        Dr. Anand is working to find the root of the problem through several new studies, including an online survey of physicians who are presented with patient scenarios and asked to respond with a treatment plan. By observing whether physicians would treat identical patients differently depending on gender, she hopes to shed light on the issue of physician bias.

        But women don't have to wait for definitive answers to put this knowledge to use. Those who are at risk for or who already have cardiovascular disease--the number-one killer of women--should educate themselves about their treatment options, Dr. Anand said.

        "Women who develop acute coronary syndromes can ask their physicians if they are candidates for such procedures, as opposed to staying silent and leaving it up to the doctor to decide," she said.


        SOURCE: American Medical Association



        E-Mail this DGNews to a colleague   To print, use this version






        All contents Copyright (c) 1995-2008 Doctor's Guide Publishing Limited. All rights reserved.



        The NTK initiative. Physicians helping physicians identify Need-To-Know science
           Feedback
        Please rate this article: Strongly DISAGREE...Strongly AGREE NTK logo
        Question 1 - Physicians need to become aware of this information as soon as possible. Question 2 - This information is likely to have an impact on the way physicians practice medicine.
        1
        2
        3
        4
        5
        6
        7
        Send