Title: Cardiovascular Disease in Women
1Cardiovascular Disease in Women
Amy Epps, MD Jean Nappi, PharmD, BCPS Christine
Mancine, RN, CNL
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3Cardiovascular Disease in Women Why the Hype?
4Cardiovascular Disease Mortality Trends for
Males and Females
United States 1979-2003
5Mortality In Women
- Heart disease is the 1 cause of death of
American women and kills 32 of them. - 43 of deaths in American women, or nearly
500,000, are caused by cardiovascular disease
(heart disease and stroke) each year. - 267,000 women die each year from heart attacks,
which kill six times as many women as breast
cancer. - 31,837 women die each year of congestive heart
failure, or 62.6 of all heart failure deaths.
6Is women's health risk due to gender difference
or gender bias?
- In the past, many of the major cardiovascular
research studies were conducted on men. - Both women and men may present classic chest
pain that grips the chest and spreads to the
shoulders, neck or arms. Women may have a
greater tendency to have atypical chest pain or
to complain of abdominal pain, difficulty
breathing (dyspnea), nausea and unexplained
fatigue. - Women may avoid or delay seeking medical care,
perhaps out of denial or not being aware of both
typical and atypical heart attack symptoms.
7- Some diagnostic tests and procedures may not be
as accurate in women, so physicians may avoid
using them. - The exercise stress test may be less accurate in
women. For example, in young women with a low
likelihood of coronary heart disease, an exercise
stress test may give a false positive result. In
contrast, single-vessel heart disease, which is
more common in women than in men, may not be
picked up on a routine exercise stress test. - More precise noninvasive and less invasive
diagnostic tests tend to cost more. These include
thallium, sestamibi or echocardiographic stress
tests.
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9Prevalence in Women
- 8 million American women are currently living
with heart disease - 10 of women ages 45 - 64
and 25 age 65 and over. - 6 million of women today have a history of heart
attack and/or angina or both. - 13 of women age 45 and over have had a heart
attack. - 435,000 American women have heart attacks each
year 83,000 are under age 65 and 9,000 are under
age 45. Their average age is 70.4. - 4 million women suffer from angina, and 47,000 of
them were hospitalized in 1999
10Compared with Men
- 38 of women and 25 of men will die within one
year of a first recognized heart attack. - 35 of women and 18 of men heart attack
survivors will have another heart attack within
six years. - 46 of women and 22 of men heart attack
survivors will be disabled with heart failure
within six years. - Women are almost twice as likely as men to die
after bypass surgery. - More women than men die of heart disease each
year, yet women receive only - 33 of angioplasties, stents and bypass surgeries
- 28 of inplantable defibrillators and
- 36 of open-heart surgeries
11At Risk Women
- The age-adjusted rate of heart disease for
African American women is 72 higher than for
white women, while African American women ages
55-64 are twice as likely as white women to have
a heart attack and 35 more likely to suffer from
coronary artery disease. - Women who smoke risk having a heart attack 19
years earlier than non-smoking women. - Women with diabetes are two to three times more
likely to have heart attacks.
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13Warning Signs
- Chest discomfort. Most heart attacks involve
discomfort in the center of the chest that lasts
more than a few minutes, or that goes away and
comes back. It can feel like uncomfortable
pressure, squeezing, fullness or pain. - Discomfort in other areas of the upper
body. Symptoms can include pain or discomfort in
one or both arms, the back, neck, jaw or
stomach. - Shortness of breath. May occur with or without
chest discomfort. - Other signs These may include breaking out in a
cold sweat, nausea or lightheadedness
14- As with men, women's most common heart attack
symptom is chest pain or discomfort. But women
are somewhat more likely than men to experience
some of the other common symptoms, particularly
shortness of breath, nausea/vomiting, and back or
jaw pain.
15Acute Myocardial Infarction in Women
- Female AMI patients are generally 5 to 10 years
older and have more comorbidities than male AMI
patients - During AMI, women are less likely to experience
chest pain than men, and may delay getting to the
hospital for treatment - Women thrombosis due to plaque erosion than
postmenopausal women - Younger female AMI patients have a higher
in-hospital mortality than men of the same age
and older female AMI patients - Women often have higher short-term mortality
rates than men largely due to their older age and
increased comorbidities (diabetes, heart failure,
depression) - After age adjustment, women generally experience
similar long-term mortality rates as men - Women are often underprescribed AMI discharge
medications, including aspirin and beta blockers
16Unstable Angina/NSTEMI in Women
- UA/NSTEMI is the most common cause of cardiac
hospital admissions - Women presenting with UA/NSTEMI have worse
clinical profiles, but less extensive CAD
compared with men - Women with ACS are more likely to present with UA
than MI - Women with UA/NSTEMI are more likely to present
with atypical symptoms than men - It is unclear whether female UA/NSTEMI patients
managed medically benefit from the use of GP
IIb/IIIa inhibitors - High-risk patients including women benefit from
an early invasive strategy - It is unclear whether a routine invasive strategy
is beneficial in women and/or lower-risk patients
- The prognosis of women with UA/NSTEMI is as good
as or better than that of men
17Stable Angina in Women
- More women than men report angina pain in the
shoulder and middle back, as well as the throat,
neck, and jaw - Women describe their angina using a more
emotional presentation than men, calling the pain
hot-burning or tender and rating it as more
intense than men - More women than men suffer from chronic stable
angina - The female stable angina patient is usually older
than the male stable angina patient and more
often has diabetes - Compared with men, women with stable angina tend
to receive fewer diagnostic tests, fewer
prescriptions for recommended medications, and
fewer interventional procedures - Women have a worse prognosis than men in terms of
relief from angina pain after treatment
18- Statistics complied fromNational Center on
Health Statistics National Heart, Lung and Blood
Institute and American Heart Association's 2002
Heart and Stroke Statistical Update
19Therapeutic Issues Related to Cardiovascular
Disease in Women
Jean Nappi, PharmD, FCCP, BCPS
Professor, Department of Pharmacy and Clinical
Sciences South Carolina College of Pharmacy, MUSC
campus Clinical Pharmacy Specialist, Cardiology
20www.goredforwomen.org
21www.goredforwomen.org
22Determine 10-year Risk for CHD Event
Category of Risk Significance Higher
Risk 20 chance of a CHD event within 10
years Intermediate Risk 10-20 chance of CHD
event within 10 years Lower risk chance of CHD event within 10 years
Circulation 2004109672-93
23Determine 10-year Risk for CHD Event
- Higher Risk (20)
- Established CHD
- Any atherosclerotic disease
- Diabetes
- Chronic kidney disease
- Framingham risk
- score 20
Circulation 2004109672-93
24Determine 10-year Risk for CHD Event
- Higher Risk (20)
- Established CHD
- Any atherosclerotic disease
- Diabetes
- Chronic kidney disease
- Framingham risk
- score 20
- Intermediate Risk
- (10-20)
- First-degree relative(s) with early-onset
atherosclerotic disease - Marked elevation of a single risk factor
- Framingham risk score 10-20
Circulation 2004109672-93
25Determine 10-year Risk for CHD Event
- Intermediate Risk (10-20)
- First-degree relative(s) with early-onset
atherosclerotic disease - Marked elevation of a single risk factor
- Framingham risk score 10-20
- Lower risk (
- Framingham risk score
- Higher Risk (20)
- Established CHD
- Any atherosclerotic disease
- Diabetes
- Chronic kidney disease
- Framingham risk
- score 20
Circulation 2004109672-93
26How to Calculate a Framingham Risk Score
- Data needed
- Age
- HDL cholesterol
- Total cholesterol
- Systolic blood pressure
- treated or not with anti-HTN medications
- Smoking status
- Go to
- Circulation 2004109672-93
- www.goredforwomen.org
27Optimal Risk Category
- Optimal Risk
- Framingham risk score
- Optimal levels of risk factors
- Blood pressure
- Blood glucose-HbA1c
- LDL 50 mg/dL, TG
- BMI 18.5 25 kg/m2
- Heart-healthy lifestyle
- No smoking
- Physical activity
- Heart-healthy diet
Circulation 2004109672-93
28Implement AppropriateCVD Prevention Strategy
- Lower Risk (
- Treat specific risk factors per guidelines if
present (HTN, Lipids) - 1. Smoking cessation/environmental smoke
avoidance - 2. Physical activity
- 30 minutes of moderate-intensity activity (brisk
walking) most days/week - 3. Heart-healthy diet
- 4. Weight maintenance/reduction to BMI
Circulation 2004109672-93
29Heart Healthy Dietwebsitecirc.ahajournals.org/cg
i/content/full/106/25/3253
- Fruits
- Vegetables
- Grains (preferably whole grain)
- Lowfat/nonfat dairy products
- Fish
- Proteins low in saturated fat
- Poultry
- Lean meats
- Legumes (beans, peas, lentils, peanuts, soy
products) - Saturated fat
- No trans fatty acids
- Cholesterol
Circulation 2004109672-93
30Implement AppropriateCVD Prevention Strategy
- Intermediate Risk (10-20)
- Smoking cessation, physical activity, heart
healthy diet, weight maintenance/reduction - Blood pressure management (optimum
- Minimum goal
- DM or chronic kidney disease minimum goal 130/80
- In general, a thiazide should be used
- Dietary sodium intake
- Lipid management
- Initiate if LDL ? 130 mg/dL despite Step 1
(statin preferred) - Aspirin 75-162 mg/day (conditionally)
Circulation 2004109672-93
31Implement AppropriateCVD Prevention Strategy
- Higher risk ( 20)
- Smoking cessation, physical activity, heart
healthy diet, weight maintenance/reduction,
cardiac rehabilitation classes (if known CHD) - If present, treat DM to HbA1c
- Blood pressure management
- Lipid management
- Saturated fat
- Cholesterol
- Initiate statin regardless of LDL level
- Aspirin 75-162 mg/day
- ACE inhibitor therapy
- ?-blocker therapy if history of MI or angina
Circulation 2004109672-93
32Discourage Inappropriate Therapies
- Should not be used for the prevention of CVD
- Vitamin E
- Vitamin C
- ? carotene
- Hormone therapy in postmenopausal women
33The Facts about Postmenopausal Hormone Therapy
- Estrogen Progestin
- (for women with a uterus)
- treat menopausal symptoms
- prevent bone loss (delay osteoporosis)
- improve cholesterol levels
34The Facts about Postmenopausal Hormone Therapy
- Compared to those taking no hormones, for every
10,000 women taking Estrogen Progestin there is
on an annual basis - 8 additional cases of breast cancer
- 7 more cases of heart disease
- 8 more strokes
- 8 more pulmonary emboli
N Engl J Med 2003349523-34
35The Facts about Postmenopausal Hormone Therapy
- Compared to those taking no hormones, for every
10,000 women taking Estrogen Progestin there is
on an annual basis - 8 additional cases of breast cancer
- 7 more cases of heart disease
- 8 more strokes
- 8 more pulmonary emboli
- 5 fewer hip fractures
- 6 fewer cases of colorectal cancer
N Engl J Med 2003349523-34
36The Facts about Postmenopausal Hormone Therapy
- Compared to those taking no hormones, for every
10,000 women taking Estrogen Progestin there is
on an annual basis - 8 additional cases of breast cancer
- 7 more cases of heart disease
- 8 more strokes
- 8 more pulmonary emboli
- 5 fewer hip fractures
- 6 fewer cases of colorectal cancer
- 23 more cases of dementia (in women 65)
N Engl J Med 2003349523-34 JAMA 20032892651-62
37The Facts about Postmenopausal Hormone Therapy
- Estrogen alone
- (women with hysterectomy)
- No increase in breast cancer
- No increase in heart disease
- Small increase in venous thromboembolism
- Small increase in dementia
- Similar increase in stroke to Estrogen Progestin
Arch Intern Med 2006166772-780 Circulation
20061132425-2434 JAMA 20042912947-2958
38Unanswered Questions
- Are the dangers the same for younger
post-menopausal women? - Average age was in the mid-sixties.
- Suggestion from post-hoc analyses that not
detrimental in younger subgroups
39Hormone Therapy Recommendations
- Do not use to prevent CV disease
- Do not use in women with CV disease
- Useful for menopausal symptom relief
- Balance risks for the individual woman
- Use lowest effective dose
- Reassess necessity/usefulness periodically
40Useful Resources
- Smoking cessation
- surgeongeneral.gov/tobacco/treating_
tobacco_use.pdf - Weight management
- nhlbi.nih.gov/guidelines/obesity/ob_home.htm
- NCEP III Guidelines (Lipids)
- circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/reprint/106/25/3143.pdf
- JNC VII (Blood pressure)
- hyper.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/42/6/1206
- ADA Clinical Practice Recommendations 2006
- care.diabetesjournals.org/content/vol29/suppl_1/
-
41Patient Education Aspects of Women with Heart
Disease
- Christine Mancine, RN, CNL
- Patient / Family Educator, 9PCU
- Phone 792-1209
- Pager 1-2777
-
42The sad, but true
- Heart disease is the number ONE cause of death
for women in this country. - When surveyed, 50 of women reported cancer as
our countrys number one cause of death, with
only 13 of them reporting coronary artery
disease as the first cause. - 1 of every 4 women, over the age of 65, has some
form of heart disease. - 8 times as many women die of heart disease each
year than of breast cancer.
43And sadder yet, after menopause
- The rate of coronary artery disease, in women,
increases 2 to 3 times. - Women quickly begin to die at a rate equal to
that of men. - Estrogen replacement therapy, which was once
thought to be cardio-protective may actually
increase the risk of heart disease. - Source Coronary Artery Prevention
- Whats Different for Women
- American Family Physician, April 2001
44Education can save lives
- Provide knowledge to enable patients to make
informed decisions - Decrease mortality by providing skills for
primary prevention of heart disease - Increase patient family understanding, while
decreasing anxiety - Correct misconceptions regarding healthcare
45They are going to blow up my heart with a
balloon.We need to listen to what our
patients say, so we may correct their
misconceptions, and help patients understand
their risk.
46 Teach patients to know their risk
- Age risk of developing CAD in women greatly
increases after menopause - Family history of heart disease
- Hypertension
- High cholesterol diet, or high total cholesterol
level with high LDL and low HDL levels - Diabetes
- Lack of exercise
- Obesity
- Stress
- Ingesting tobacco products
47Risk Assessment for Women Without Known Coronary
Artery Disease
- Major Risk Factors (3 points each)
- Typical anginal pain _____
- Postmenopausal with hormone replacement
therapy _____ - Diabetes _____
- Peripheral vascular disease _____
- Intermediate risk factors (2 points each)
- Hypertension _____
- Smoking _____
- High total cholesterol level _____
- Minor risk factors (1 point each)
- Patient age 65 _____
- Obesity _____
- Sedentary lifestyle _____
- Family history of coronary artery
disease _____ - Stress _____
-
48Teach your Patients to Know the
SymptomsAtypical May Actually Be Typical
- Unusual fatigue or sleep disturbances which can
occur up to one month prior to MI - Feeling breathless, often without chest pain of
any kind - Flu like symptoms, especially nausea,
clamminess or cold sweats - Unexplained weakness or dizziness
- Pain in upper back, shoulders, neck or jaw
- Anxiety
49Women are more likely to disregard vague
symptoms.
- Educate your patients to call 911 or EMS in their
area - NEVER drive themselves to the hospital
- Prevention is the Key to decreasing CAD
50Healthy eating tips
- Encourage patients to maintain a low sodium, low
cholesterol diet - Encourage patients to have realistic goals in
regards to their diet - Remind patients that portion size and how their
food is prepared is as important as what is eaten - Recommend patients to strive to
-
- Keep total cholesterol level less than
200mg/dL -
- Keep HDL (High Density Lipoprotein) the
good cholesterol at 40mg or higher - Keep LDL (Low Density Lipoprotein) the bad
cholesterol less than 100mg -
- Keep Triglycerides less than 150mg
51Patient Quote of the Week
- I always take the skin off of my fried
chicken, before I eat it. - Once again, correct misconceptions
patients have with respect to - lifestyle changes.
52Calorie consumption
- How many calories are needed?
- Level of exercise Calories needed
- Less active (2 - 3 times per week) 13
- Moderately active (4 - 5 times per week) 15
- Very active (6 - 7 times per week) 18
- Healthy Body Weight____ x level of activity
____ calories needed - Source MUSC Nutritional Guide 2006
53Fitness Highlights
- Exercise lowers blood pressure, raises HDL
levels, and can help maintain a healthy weight - Patients need to have aerobic exercise at least
3 times per week for 20 - 30 minutes per workout - Encourage your patients to start small, and
work up gradually. Also to pick activities which
they enjoy. If they hate to walk outside, they
wont stick to it. Make it fun!
54Stress
- Excess stress can raise blood pressure, and for
some people, make them overeat - Teach your patients to be aware of their own
triggers. - Find positive activities which they enjoy and
help reduce stress. - Set limits and realistic goals
- Never be afraid to say no, or to ask for help
55Stress
56Tobacco Facts
- Smoking one pack of cigarettes per day triples
the risk for dying from heart disease - Two or more packs per day will reduce one minute
off a persons life for every one minute he or
she smokes - Quitting, reverts the person's risk back to that
of a non-smoker in 10 years
57Prevention
58Tips to help your patients quit
- Explain the risks of smoking and the benefits of
no longer using tobacco products - Encourage patients to make a plan, set a date,
locate support, remove all tobacco and ashtrays
from the house, and to implement the plan - Provide support and encouragement to the patient
to stick with it. Help patients to brain storm
about other activities they can with their free
time instead of smoking - Teach patients to reward themselves in positive
ways - Teach patients, if they slip, it is okay, and to
keep trying
59Resources
- Health Information Topics on Intranet
- Micromedex
- Patient/Family Education site
- Get Well Network
- Online Resources
- www.medlineplus.com
- www.heartcenteronline.com
- www.quitsmoking.com
- www.americanheart.org
- MUSC Print Shop
- Stop Smoking Guide OTC 801278