AI Article Synopsis

  • Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death for women, even with 30 years of medical advances.
  • Women often get heart diseases later in life than men and show unusual symptoms that are hard to recognize.
  • The paper discusses how gender affects heart health and looks into the research on diagnosis and treatment for women.

Article Abstract

Cardiovascular diseases are still the main cause of death among women despite the improvements in treatment and prognosis achieved in the last 30 years of research. The determinant factors and causes have not been completely identified but the role of "gender" is now recognized. It is well known that women tend to develop cardiovascular disease at an older age than men, and have a high probability of manifesting atypical symptoms not often recognized. Other factors may also co-exist in women, which may favor the onset of specific cardiac diseases such as those with a sex-specific etiology (differential effects of estrogens, pregnancy pathologies, etc.) and those with a different gender expression of specific and prevalent risk factors, inflammatory and autoimmune diseases and cancer. Whether the gender differences observed in cardiovascular outcomes are influenced by real biological differences remains a matter of debate.This ANMCO position paper aims at providing the state of the research on this topic, with particular attention to the diagnostic aspects and to care organization.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1714/3881.38644DOI Listing

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