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A comprehensive view of sex-specific issues related to cardiovascular disease
Authors:Louise Pilote   Kaberi Dasgupta   Veena Guru   Karin H. Humphries   Jennifer McGrath   Colleen Norris   Doreen Rabi   Johanne Tremblay   Arsham Alamian   Tracie Barnett   Jafna Cox   William Amin Ghali   Sherry Grace   Pavel Hamet   Teresa Ho   Susan Kirkland   Marie Lambert   Danielle Libersan   Jennifer O'Loughlin   Gilles Paradis   Milan Petrovich     Vicky Tagalakis
Abstract:Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of mortality in women. In fact, CVD is responsible for a third of all deaths of women worldwide and half of all deaths of women over 50 years of age in developing countries. The prevalence of CVD risk factor precursors is increasing in children. Retrospective analyses suggest that there are some clinically relevant differences between women and men in terms of prevalence, presentation, management and outcomes of the disease, but little is known about why CVD affects women and men differently. For instance, women with diabetes have a significantly higher CVD mortality rate than men with diabetes. Similarly, women with atrial fibrillation are at greater risk of stroke than men with atrial fibrillation. Historically, women have been underrepresented in clinical trials. The lack of good trial evidence concerning sex-specific outcomes has led to assumptions about CVD treatment in women, which in turn may have resulted in inadequate diagnoses and suboptimal management, greatly affecting outcomes. This knowledge gap may also explain why cardiovascular health in women is not improving as fast as that of men. Over the last decades, mortality rates in men have steadily declined, while those in women remained stable. It is also becoming increasingly evident that gender differences in cultural, behavioural, psychosocial and socioeconomic status are responsible, to various degrees, for the observed differences between women and men. However, the interaction between sex-and gender-related factors and CVD outcomes in women remains largely unknown.
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