Title: Cardiovascular Disease in Black Women
1Cardiovascular Disease in Black Women
- Rozann Hansford, R.N.
- MPH Candidate
2Cardiovascular Heart Disease
- Cardiovascular disease (CVD) refers to a wide
variety of heart and blood vessel disorders
including CHD, HTN, stroke, rheumatic heart
disease - Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) refers to several
disorders that decrease blood supply to the heart
muscle
3Pathophysiology of CHD
- Atherosclerosis is the underlying disease process
- Typically begins in childhood
- Slowly progressive,thickening of the inner layer
of the arteries walls - Incidence increases with age
- Not an inevitable consequence of aging
4Pathophysiology of CHD
- Disease progression starts with fat deposition
and advances to fatty streaks with lipid core and
calcium deposits - As atherosclerosis progresses, arteries narrow
enhancing possibility of endothelial disruption,
hemorrhage and occlusive thrombosis (3)
5Pathophysiolgy of CHD
- Contributing factors include inflammatory,
immunologic and hemostatic processes involving
multiple systems and cellular types - Persons most likely to suffer a myocardial
infarction have lt50 occlusion, not gt70
occlusion as previously thought
6Biological differences between blacks and whites?
- It is not known whether cellular and molecular
mechanisms of atherogenesis differ between races - Blacks with hypertension respond less to
angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors - Blacks demonstrate greater fibrinolysis when
receiving tissue plasmin activator (TPA) for
myocardial infarction (4)
7Epidemiology of CHD in Black Women (US)
- Black Americans experience a higher
morbidity/mortality compared with other
racial/ethnic groups and have the highest age
adjusted CHD mortality (1). CVD accounts for
41.6 of deaths in black women - CHD death rates are 67 higher for black women
compared to white women
8Epidemiology of CHD in Black Women
- CHD is particularly prevalent in black women
younger than 55 years old who have 2.5 times the
risk of CHD death compared to white women (6). - Are black women deriving the same benefit from
estrogen as white women? - Black women have 2 times the rate of angina
compared with white women and five times the rate
of angina compare to black men.
9CHD Risk Factors in Black Women
- Framingham Heart Study.defined and quantified
cardiac risk factors and related finding to
cardiovascular outcomes - Enrollment limited almost exclusively to whites
- Should this data be generalized to include all
racial/ethnic mixes?
10CHD Risk Factors in Black Women Clinical Trials
- CHSCardiovascular Heart Study..enrollment
limited to white men and women - Charleston Heart Study, MRFIT study and Chicago
Heart Study enrollment limited to men
11CHD Risk factors in black women Clinical trials
- Atherosclerosis in the Community (ARIC) included
large cohort of black women - Four communities in the US, 1987-1997
- Included 14,026 black and white men
- Included 10 years follow-up
- Hypertension a particularly strong risk factor in
black women
12CHD Risk Factors in black women
- National Health and Nutrition Evaluation Survey I
(NHANES I) - 14,000 black and white persons from 1982-1992
- Elevated systolic blood pressure and smoking in
black women predictive of CHD - Excess risk of CHD in black women relates to
higher levels of identified risk factors
13CHD Risk factors in black women Smoking
- Not specifically studied in black women
- In women, first MIs occur 19 years earlier if
woman smokes - May be a strong risk factor in black women
because of effects of co-morbidity (black women
have a high incidence of HTN,diabetes and
hypercholesterolemia
14CHD Risk factors in black women Hypertension
- A major risk factor for the development of CHD
and stroke. - Associated with pathologic changes in the
arterial walls and endothelium, decreased of
small peripheral arteries, increased left
ventricular wall thickness and abnormal diastolic
function (15).
15CHD risk factors in black women Hypertension
- Particularly strong risk factor in Black women
(ARIC) study - Left ventricular hypertrophy is an independent
risk factor for development of CHD
16CHD risk factors in black women Diabetes
- Incidence of CHD is 2 to 4 times higher in
persons with Diabetes - Incidence of type II Diabetes is 9.1 in black
women compared with 4.5 in white women
17CHD risk factors in black women Diabetes
- Implicated as a possible etiology of increased
CHD incidence in young black women - Animal Studies suggest that hyperglycemia and
hyperinsulinemia-insulin may prevent the
cardiovascular effects of insulin - Black women have a higher incidence of obesity
and diabetes relative to white women,protection
from CHD that sex usually provides may not be as
strong in black women
18CHD risk factors in black women Syndrome X
- Syndrome Xcumulative effects of hypertension,
glucose intolerance and dyslipidemia - Associated with a higher cardiovascular
mortality - Has a synergistic effect on atherogenesis
- Seen more often in black women than other
racial/ethnic mixes
19CHD risk factors in black women Obesity
- Approximately 75 of African American women are
obese, more than any other racial gender mix - Body Mass Index (BMI), body fat distribution and
central obesity are all predictive of CHD risk in
women - Major cause is inactivity
20CHD risk factors in black women
Hypercholesterolemia
- Incidence of elevated cholesterol is 20 in black
women..relationship to CHD not studied in black
women - In black men, relationship of elevated
cholesterol to CHD development is confusing, may
have implications for black women
21CHD risk factors in black women
Hypercholesterolemia
- In whites, higher socioeconomic is associated
with higher HDLs..the reverse is true in black
men - Black men have higher levels of lipoprotein but
these levels are less predictive of CHD in black
men compared to white men
22Socioeconomic factors
- CHD in black women results from a complex
interplay between established risk factors,
access to health care, behavioral and coping
mechanisms and socioeconomic status - Differences in access to care and economic
factors may play an important role
23Socioeconomic factors
- Because black women do not access health care
facilities as often as white women, community
based interventions at churches, work places and
schools may be useful for prevention - Heart, Body and Soul partnership between Clergy
and Johns Hopkins University minimizes barriers
associated with mistrust of health personal
24Research needed!!!
- Insufficient data available for resolving
questions related to racial/gender comparisons - Need to determine if differences, clinical
paradoxes and inconsistencies are related to
chance findings, artifacts in reporting,
environmental differences or biological
differences
25Research Needed!!!
- Data already collected needs to be pooled and
examined a first step would include a national
screening policy - Culturally validated data tools needed
- Need to study efficacy of prevention strategies
26Conclusions
- Most large scale clinical trials to date have
excluded black women. Results have been
generalized to include black women and this may
be very misleading - Small studies, incidental findings, responses to
some meds and animal research hint at the
possibility of biological differences between
black women and other racial/ethnic mixes
27Conclusions
- Black women tend to get CHD 10 years earlier than
white women. The reasons for this though
hypothesized, have not been established. - Hypertension appears to be the single most
important risk factor for the development of CHD
black women.
28Conclusions
- The excessive incidence of CHD in black women is
likely due to a complex relationship between
social, behavioral, genetic and economic factors.
Teasing out the contributions of these factors so
that appropriate public health measures can be
implemented is likely to be a very difficult task!
29References
- 1. Gillum RF. Cardiovascular Disease in the
United States an epidemiologic overview. In
Saunders E, ed. Cardiovascular diseases in
blacks. Philadelphia, Pa FA Davis, 19913-16. - 2. Gillum RF, The epidemiology of cardiovascular
disease in Black Americans. New Eng J Med.
19963351597-1599. - 3. Ross R. The pathogenisis of atherosclerosis a
perspective for the 1990s. Nature.
1993362801-809.
30- 8. Keil J, Sutherland s, Hames C, Lackland D,
Gazes P, Knapp R, Troyer HA. Coronary disease
mortality and risk factors in black and white
men results from the combined Charleston SC and
Evans County Georgia, Heart Studies. Arch Intl
Med. 19951551521-1527. - 9. Smith GD, Neaton JD, Wentworth D, Stamler R,
Stamler J. Mortality differences between black
and white men in the USA contribution of income
and other risk factors among men screened for
MRFIT. Lancet. 1998351934-939.
31- 13. Hansen EF, Andersen LT, Von Eyben FE.
Cigarette smoking and age at first acute
myocardial infarction and influence of gender and
extent of smoking. Am J Cardiol.
1993171439-1442. - 14. Tsang T, Barnes M, Gersh B, Bernard J, Hayes
S. Risks of Coronary Heart Disease in Women
Current understanding and Evolving Concepts. Mayo
Clinic Proceedings. 2000751289-1303. - 15. Sempos CT, Cleeman JI, Carroll MD. Prevalence
of High Blood Pressure among US adults an update
based on guidelines from the second report of the
National Cholesterol Education Program Adult
Treatment Panel. JAMA. 19932693009-3014.
32- 20. Willet WC, Manson JE, Stampfer MJ et al.
Weight, weight change, and coronary disease in
womenrisk within the normal weight range. JAMA.
1995273461-465. - 21. Stevenson JC, Cook D, Godsland IF. Influence
of age and menopause on serum lipids and
lipoproteins in healthy women. Atherosclerosis.
19939883-90. - 22. Freedman DS, Strogatz DS, Eaker E, Joesoef
MR, Destefano F. Differences between blackand
white men in correlates or high density
lipoprotein cholesterol. Am J Epidemiol 1990.
132656-669.