Women and Heart Disease Lecture Powerpoint Flashcards

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1
Q

Women are unique in that they often exhibit what unusual symptoms of acute myocardial infarction/cardiovascular disease (4)

A
  • Fatigue
  • Upper abdominal pain or burning sensation
  • Shortness of breath
  • Can be precipitated by rest or sleep
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2
Q

What rate of women die from breast cancer? From heart disease?

A

1/36, 1/3

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3
Q

Female breast cancer deaths have continued to ___ while heart disease deaths have ____ over the years

A

decrease, increased

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4
Q

Diastolic heart failure (what gender is it more common in and definition of disease)

A
  • More common in women than men
  • a process due to aging, caused by thickened stiff heart muscle in ventricles that is common in advanced age with HTN history
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5
Q

Pre vs Post menopausal likelihood of death by acute MI

A

1 in 17 pre and 1 in 2.5 post

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6
Q

Death rate from CVD and cancer is more common in what race of females and why?

A

White, often have increased trouble quitting smoking

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7
Q

Which gender is more likely to have a second heart attack within first 6 years of first and why?

A

Women, they tend to not change behaviors following MI to same degree as men

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8
Q

Risk factor calculator for CVD

A

A formula that determines thru a combo of gender, age, family history, and modifiable risk factors such as obesity, smoking, and lack of exercise the likelihood of being at risk for CVD

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9
Q

Female smokers go thru ____ earlier than their non smoking counterparts

A

Menopause (now their risk for heart disease increases earlier in life due to drop in estrogens –> drop in cardioprotective HDL)

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10
Q

Desired hip to waist ratio to minimize cardiovascular disease in women, what is the desired BMI?

A

less than .8, less than 25

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11
Q

___shaped women are at greater risk for CVD than ___ shaped women

A

apple, pear

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12
Q

Estrogen replacement therapy for reducing risk of heart disease in females

A

NOT recommended for solely reducing risk, instead recommended to change modifiable risk factors

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13
Q

Common causes of 2ndary hypertension in females (5)

A
  • PCOS
  • Renal artery stenosis
  • aortic coarctation
  • Cushing’s syndrome
  • OCP usage > 5 years (rare)
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14
Q

Compared to men, women with heart failure have these characteristics (4)

A
  • older
  • more likely to have hypertension
  • more likely to have diabetes
  • more likely to have diastolic dysfunction
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15
Q

2 types of chest pain more common in women and what are the conditions associated with them called, and what vasculature do they effect?

A

1) vasospastic angina (prinzmetal’s, effects epicardial vessels)
2) microvascular angina (cardiac syndrome X, effects vessels all over heart)

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16
Q

Vasospastic angina (prinzmetal’s) in women, diagnostic findings, and treatments (3)

A
  • Vasoconstriction or spasm of epicardial coronary arteries that causes pain at rest often in women common in heavy smokers
  • present with elevated ST segment during episode, does not have troponin elevation, has normal angiogram
  • nitroglycerin and Ca2+ channel blockers while daily aspirin makes it worse
17
Q

Microvascular angina (cardiac syndrome X) and how is it diagnosed?

A
  • Abnormal vasoreactivity of coronary microvessels, sees chest pain and ischemic response to stress testing, very symptomatic and difficult to treat
  • Diagnosed by combining treadmill testing with nuclear imaging or exercise echocardiography
18
Q

Drawbacks to diagnostic imaging in women (2)

A
  • Lower exercise capacity decreases likelihood of reaching dequate pressure rate product
  • breast attenuation artifact leads to higher false positive imaging studies
19
Q

Women at high or intermediate risk of coronary artery disease should undergo this set of tests and this alternative set if they cannot exercise

A
  • treadmill echocardiogarphy or nuclear perfusion imaging

- dobutamine stress echocardiography or adenosine nuclear imaging

20
Q

Takesubo’s cardiomyopathy and treatment options

A
  • Mimic’s acute coronary syndrome, characterized by left ventricular apical ballooning, presents with absence of angiographically significant coronary artery stenosis and is typically precipitated by acute emotional distress (also known as broken heart syndrome)
  • Treated with ACE inhibitors, B blockers, aspirin and a statin