(Circulation. 1997;96:2468-2482.)
© 1997 American Heart Association, Inc.
Articles |
| Introduction |
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CVD, particularly coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke, remains the leading killer of women in America and most developed countries. In 1994, the last year for which statistics are available, CVD claimed the lives of more than one half million women and accounted for 45.2% of all deaths in women, more than all forms of cancer combined.2 CVD is a particularly important problem among minority women. The death rate due to CVD is 69% higher in black women than white women. Misperceptions still exist that CVD is not a real problem for women, although it is estimated that 1 in 2 women will eventually die of heart disease or stroke, compared with 1 in 25 who will eventually die of breast cancer.2 This report discusses recent advances in knowledge of the occurrence, determinants, and treatment of atherosclerotic CVD in women, including CHD, hypertension, stroke, and peripheral arterial disease. Since the last scientific statement on this topic in 1993,3 much attention has been directed toward a better appreciation of the influence of gender on cardiovascular risk and management, but important gaps in knowledge remain. Recent developments in cardiovascular research undoubtedly will have a significant impact on prevention, clinical care, and outcomes of women and will provide direction for future work.
| Coronary Heart Disease |
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In the Cardiovascular Health Study, the prevalence of myocardial infarction (MI) in older women was 9.7% for those aged 65 through 69 years and 17.9% for those 85 years and older. Of particular concern is that nearly two thirds of sudden deaths due to CHD in women in the Framingham Heart Study occurred in those with no previous symptoms of disease compared with about half the sudden deaths in men.2 Treatment efforts in women may be less likely to be effective in reducing the death rate because the majority of cases may never reach a hospital. For these women, primary prevention is likely to be the only practical solution.
Substantial ethnic differences in CHD deaths in women exist, although data are sparse for minorities other than blacks. CHD death rates are 34% higher for black women than white women, compared with a 5% higher rate for black men compared with white men. Declines in CHD death rates also show gender and ethnic variations. Death rates in men declined more steeply in the 1980s and 1990s, and rates in white women declined more rapidly than those in black women during the same period.2 The reasons for these differences remain unclear but may be related to differences in reporting, access to care, detection biases, and competing risks. In addition, higher prevalence of certain risk factors in black women (particularly diabetes and obesity) may explain their increased risk of CHD.
Ethnic differences in CHD are even more perplexing for Hispanics. Death rates for CVD and CHD have been reported to be markedly lower for Mexican-American men compared with white men, but this advantage has not been demonstrated for Mexican-American women.4 Prevalence of ECG-defined MI shows similar trends with comparable rates among women in the two ethnic groups but higher rates in non-Hispanic white men compared with Hispanic men. More recent data from the Corpus Christi Heart Project demonstrate higher hospitalization rates for heart attacks and incident MI in Mexican-Americans compared with non-Hispanic whites for both men and women. This same study demonstrated a higher case-fatality after MI in Mexican-Americans and women compared with non-Hispanic whites and men, respectively.5
Risk Factors and Primary Prevention
The major risk factors for CHD in women are cigarette smoking,
hypertension (including isolated systolic hypertension),
dyslipidemia, diabetes mellitus, obesity, sedentary
lifestyle, and poor nutrition. Although most risk factors for CHD are
similar in men and women, gender differences have been documented,
particularly diabetes and dyslipidemia. The prevalence,
magnitude of effect, and gender differences in identified risk factors
for CHD are summarized below.
Cigarette smoking remains the leading preventable cause of CHD in women, with more than 50% of MIs among middle-aged women attributable to tobacco.6 The magnitude of excess risk, a twofold to fourfold elevation, is similar in women and men.7 Risk of CHD begins to decline within months of smoking cessation and reaches the level of persons who have never smoked within 3 to 5 years.8 Although the prevalence of smoking among US women declined from 34% in 1965 to 24% in 1991, smoking cessation rates have declined more slowly among women than men.9 On the basis of current trends, it is estimated that by the year 2000 smoking rates will be higher in women (23%) than in men (20%).10 These changing demographics of smoking, particularly the unfavorable smoking patterns among younger women, may contribute substantially to the future burden of CHD on women, as well as other smoking-related illnesses.
Epidemiological studies document a strong association between high
levels of both systolic and diastolic blood
pressure (BP) and risk of CHD in both women and men.11
Among US adults older than 45 years, 60% of white women and 79% of
African-American women were classified as having hypertension (defined
as either taking antihypertensive medication or having systolic
BP
140 mm Hg or diastolic BP
>90 mm Hg). In the most recent National Health
and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III, 1988-1991), approximately
one half of identified hypertensive subjects were receiving treatment
with antihypertensive medication, but only about 21% had hypertension
that was well controlled (BP <140/90).11 Of particular
concern for older women is isolated systolic hypertension,
which is estimated to affect 30% of women older than
65.12
In the Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly Program (SHEP), in
which women constituted 57% of the study population, antihypertensive
therapy resulted in a 25% reduction in CHD and a 36% reduction in
stroke in both sexes combined.13 For severe
diastolic hypertension (diastolic BP
110),
the benefits of medication are large and obvious for both sexes. For
mild to moderate hypertension (diastolic BP = 90 to
109 mm Hg), a meta- analysis of randomized
drug-treatment trials found reductions of 14% in nonfatal CHD, 42% in
stroke, and 21% in vascular mortality in both sexes
combined.14 A recent subgroup meta-analysis based
on the database of seven trials from the Individual Analysis of
Antihypertensive Intervention Trials (INDANA), in which primarily
ß-blockers and thiazide diuretics were used, shows a
significant effect for stroke and major CVD events in women. The
relative risk reduction did not differ between men and
women.15 Weight reduction and dietary interventions also
have important roles in prevention and treatment of
hypertension.11
Increased total serum cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol are risk factors for CHD in both women and men. From 1980 to 1991 more than 50% of women older than 55 years had serum cholesterol levels that were considered high (>240 mg/dL).16 In a recent meta-analysis, these lipids predicted CHD mortality in women younger than 65 but not in older women.17 A low level of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, however, was a risk factor for CHD in both younger and older women and was a stronger predictor of CHD mortality in women than in men. The role of triglycerides in CHD risk remains controversial, but observational studies suggest they may be a particularly important risk factor in women and the elderly, the majority of whom are women.18
Limited data are available from randomized trials of lipid-lowering therapy for primary prevention of CHD in women. In an overview of three such trials that included women (two using dietary therapy and one using medication), no evidence for reduction in CHD or total mortality was observed in the treated groups.19 In contrast, secondary prevention trials of lipid-lowering therapy in women with CHD suggest substantial benefit of treatment and significant undertreatment of postmenopausal women with CHD (discussed elsewhere in this statement).
Obesity and sedentary lifestyle are parallel, interrelated epidemics in the United States that contribute to increased risk of CHD. The prevalence of obesity has increased among both men and women in the United States in the past decade; currently about one third of adult women (or 34 million) are classified as obese.20 Moreover, 60% of both men and women have no regular physical activity.21 Obesity, particularly abdominal adiposity, is an important risk factor for CHD in women.22 23 Although most of the epidemiological studies of exercise and CHD have been conducted in men, most studies in women suggest a comparable 50% risk reduction among active women compared with sedentary women.24 Recent evidence suggests that even moderate-intensity activity, including brisk walking, is associated with substantial reduction in CHD risk.25 These findings support the 1995 federal exercise guidelines endorsing 30 minutes of moderately intense physical activity most days of the week,26 a program that should be feasible and safe for most of the population.
Regular exercise and maintenance of healthy weight should also help reduce insulin resistance and the risk of noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, which appears to be an even stronger risk factor for CHD in women than in men.27 Diabetes is associated with a threefold to sevenfold elevation in CHD risk among women, compared with a twofold to threefold elevation among men; this gender-based difference may be due to a particularly deleterious effect of diabetes on lipids and blood pressure in women.27 Diabetes is the fourth leading cause of death among black women and third among Hispanic women aged 45 to 74 years and American-Indian women aged 65 to 74 years. It is also the second leading cause of death in Pima Indian women. Approximately half of all deaths in persons with noninsulin dependent diabetes mellitus are due to heart disease, the majority of which is ischemic heart disease.28
Increasing research and knowledge related to nutrition have led to identification of several dietary factors that influence CHD risk. The epidemiological evidence is compelling: diets low in saturated fat and high in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and fiber are associated with a reduced risk of CHD.29 Trans fatty acids have recently been linked to adverse lipid profiles and an increased risk of CHD.30 The role of other fatty acids, including monounsaturated, polyunsaturated, and marine omega-3 fatty acids, remains controversial. Moderate intake of alcohol is related to reduction of CHD but may raise blood pressure and increase risk of breast cancer. 31
Genetic factors are also important determinants of CHD risk in both men and women, but they are not modifiable and thus are not further addressed here. Recently identified thrombotic, hemostatic, and inflammatory markers for CHD have promising roles in predicting risk of vascular events, but their clinical usefulness in the general population remains largely unknown.
Pharmacological interventions, including antiplatelet therapy and postmenopausal hormone replacement therapy, are appropriate in selected patients. In primary prevention the balance of benefits and risks of aspirin prophylaxis among women remains unknown and awaits the results of the ongoing Women's Health Study, the only randomized trial of aspirin in usual-risk women. Antioxidant vitamin supplements, particularly vitamin E and homocysteine-lowering agents such as folate and B6, have promising roles in prevention of CHD, but conclusive evidence awaits the results of several ongoing randomized clinical trials.32 Early surgical menopause is linked to increased risk of CHD, which appears to be negated by the use of estrogen therapy.33 The role of postmenopausal hormone therapy in prevention and treatment of CHD is discussed in detail elsewhere in this report.
In summary, epidemiological studies and randomized clinical trials provide compelling evidence that CHD is largely preventable.8 Pharmacological intervention has a role in primary prevention for selected patients. However, a major emphasis should be placed on lifestyle modifications, including smoking cessation, regular physical activity, maintenance of healthy weight, and consumption of a diet low in saturated fat and high in fruits and vegetables. Further studies on the potential benefits of stress reduction and psychosocial interventions are indicated.
| Identification and Management of Women With Coronary Heart Disease |
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Historically, chest pain has not been perceived to be of great prognostic value in women. This is based partly on follow-up reports from the Framingham study indicating that women developed chest pain more often than men, but it rarely progressed to MI.34 In the same population the predictive value of angina was increased among older subsets of women.35 In the Coronary Artery Surgery Study (CASS), half of all women undergoing arteriography for suspected CHD did not have significant obstruction.36 Refinement of the diagnosis as definite angina, probable angina, or nonspecific chest pain may improve the predictive value of symptoms. Women with classical angina pectoris had a 71% probability of angiographic evidence of disease compared with 36% of women with probable angina. Nonspecific chest pain syndromes in women have an excellent prognosis and are rarely associated with significant disease on arteriography.37
Syndrome X, defined as exertional angina, a positive response to exercise testing and angiographically normal coronary arteries occurs predominantly in postmenopausal women. Although chest pain may be typical for angina, conventional antianginal therapy may not successfully treat symptoms. Long-term survival rates are not reduced in women with syndrome X.38
Despite the limited prognostic value of chest pain, it remains the most common initial manifestation of CHD in women. In the Myocardial Infarction Triage and Intervention (MITI) Project,39 nearly 90% of women with MI had chest pain as a feature of initial clinical presentation, similar to that of men. In contrast, women with MI were significantly more likely than men to present with upper abdominal pain, dyspnea, nausea, and fatigue. Chest pain and possible atypical symptoms of angina should be pursued in women, given the appropriate clinical context and based on the underlying probability of disease. A recent review of the evaluation of chest pain in women suggests that it is possible to stratify patients into broad categories of low, intermediate, and high likelihood of disease on the basis of the existence of minor and major determinants of CHD to make diagnostic testing more cost-efficient and informative.40
The choice and interpretation of an array of noninvasive procedures poses unique challenges in women. Factors that influence gender differences in the accuracy of diagnostic testing include a lower prevalence of CHD and multivessel disease compared with men, sex-based differences in the pathophysiology of coronary disease and its relation to risk factors, altered referral patterns for men versus women, and features intrinsic to the testing procedure itself.41 42
Gender-specific considerations related to diagnostic test performance may influence the choice of procedures used to evaluate chest pain syndromes in women. Electrocardiographic (ECG) stress testing in women has a lower sensitivity and specificity compared with men, not only because of gender differences in prevalence and extent of disease but also because women are less likely to achieve an adequate heart rate response and more likely to have repolarization abnormalities.43 In addition, hormone replacement therapy may induce a false-positive ST-segment depression, thereby reducing the specificity of ECG exercise testing in women.44
Sensitivity and specificity of pharmacological or exercise treadmill testing is enhanced by added imaging techniques. Myocardial perfusion imaging with thallium 201 has improved sensitivity over conventional treadmill testing, but breast tissue attenuation of radioactivity may lead to a false-positive test result in women.45 Attenuation artifacts may be reduced and specificity increased with the use of newer high energy agents such as technetium 99m Sestamibi and simultaneous ECG-gated single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), but data are limited in women.46 Radionuclide ventriculography is of limited prognostic value in women because of a reduced left ventricular response to exercise compared with men.47 In contrast, exercise echocardiography may be a valuable diagnostic tool in women. It is more specific than exercise electrocardiography and is considered a cost-effective approach to diagnosis of CHD in women.48
These data suggest gender has a significant impact on the accuracy of widely available diagnostic tests and should be a consideration in the choice and interpretation of noninvasive tests. Emerging data on electron beam computed tomography, a noninvasive screening technique that detects coronary calcium, suggest minimal gender differences in diagnostic and prognostic usefulness.49 Recent advances in development of three-dimensional imaging with magnetic resonance or positron emission tomography hold promise for women because they may overcome some of the inherent test-related limitations described above; however, these are still considered experimental.50 As new techniques are developed to help detect CHD, gender-specific information about test efficacy will need to be provided to clinicians. Follow-up evaluation and management should be based on both pretest and posttest probability of disease in women.
Prognosis and Revascularization
Several reports have documented a worse prognosis for women with
CHD than for men with CHD, which likely reflects increased severity of
illness at presentation, increased age, and comorbidity in
women. In the Framingham study the initial case fatality rate for MI
was greater in women compared with men, and within 1 year after
infarction, 44% of women died, compared with 27% of
men.51 In addition, the proportion of first events
occurring as sudden death rose more sharply with age in women than in
men in this cohort. Data from the more recent Multicenter Investigation
of the Limitation of Infarct Size (MILIS) study has also documented a
more adverse prognosis in women after MI compared with their male
counterparts, even after adjustment for differences in
risk.52 In-hospital mortality was 13% for women versus
7% for men. Cumulative mortality at 48 months was 36% for women
versus 21% for men, with the poor prognosis among women largely due to
a high mortality rate in black women (48%).
Observations from placebo control groups of large-scale clinical trials, such as the International Study of Infarct Survival (ISIS-1) trial of atenolol, confirm a greater 1-week mortality for women compared with men (7.5% versus 3.7%).53 ISIS-4, which compared captopril with placebo in patients receiving thrombolytic agents after MI, also suggested an increased short- and long-term mortality in women.54 The 30-day mortality rate in women was double that of men in the Global Utilization of Streptokinase and TPA for Occluded Arteries (GUSTO-I) study of tissue type plasminogen activator.55 Women were shown to have a 60% greater mortality than men 35 days after presentation to the hospital with acute MI in the Fibrinolytic Therapy Trialists study meta-analysis.56 In contrast, the outcome of women and men with unstable angina and nonQ-wave MI was found to be similar in the Thrombolysis in Myocardial Ischemia (TIMI) III B Registry despite less extensive disease and better left ventricular function.57 However, older age and more comorbidity among women may have attenuated these benefits.
Reported differences in mortality rates among studies may reflect differences in the baseline characteristics of the populations studied as well as methodological considerations related to whether short-term, long-term, or cumulative mortality is examined. Furthermore, gender differences in mortality in the postthrombolytic era may potentially reflect gender differences in utilization and responsiveness to cardiovascular revascularization and aggressiveness of postinfarction risk reduction.
Use of diagnostic and therapeutic cardiovascular modalities may be related to gender differences in morbidity and mortality. Data from the Myocardial Infarction Triage and Intervention (MITI) registry suggest that the gender gap in mortality due to acute MI is associated with a lower likelihood of women receiving acute cardiovascular interventions.39 In this community hospital trial, women had twice the in-hospital mortality of men and were half as likely to undergo acute catheterization, angioplasty, thrombolysis, or coronary bypass surgery. In contrast, women with unstable angina or nonQ-wave MI in the TIMI III Registry had similar risk for an adverse event at 6 weeks compared with men despite being less likely to undergo revascularization.58 In area hospitals participating in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study, women hospitalized for an MI were less likely to have coronary angiography, bypass graft surgery, and thrombolytic therapy than men, even after adjusting for several clinical and demographic variables.59 This may not necessarily represent underuse in women, because evidence for a gender difference in the appropriateness of use of cardiovascular procedures has not been clearly demonstrated.60 Recently, women in New York state have had a higher rate of bypass surgery when compared with women in Ontario, but it is unclear if this translates into a survival benefit.61
Gender differences in the efficacy of myocardial revascularization procedures could also explain a more adverse prognosis in women, but data are limited due to a lack of randomized clinical trials that include large numbers of women. The mortality benefit of thrombolytic therapy in men and women was found to be equivalent in the GUSTO-I trial; however, women had a higher stroke rate.62 Reinfarction and reocclusion of an initially patent infarct-related artery tended to be more common in women but were not statistically different from men.63 With respect to percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA), women have an excellent long-term prognosis after a successful procedure, similar to that observed in men.64 65 66 However, procedural morbidity and mortality for PTCA is three times higher for women.67 Newer revascularization procedures such as atherectomy and stents have been less well studied in women and men.
CASS68 demonstrated a similar rate of bypass grafting for men and women. The 15-year survival rate approached 50% for men and women with initial medical treatment. A greater survival rate was associated with surgical treatment for men (52%) versus women (48%), which was attributable to differences in operative mortality. Differences in functional class, age, and size of coronary arteries as well as a greater likelihood of emergent surgery have explained a gender differential in operative mortality in some studies but not others.69 70 71 Women have been sicker at the time of bypass surgery but show similar patterns of recovery and improvements in psychosocial and physical functioning after bypass surgery.72 73
It has been suggested that gender differences in mortality related to CHD no longer exist after adjustment for differences in age, risk factors, and interventions.74 75 76 77 78 Although this may be important from an explanatory point of view, from the perspective of public health the fact remains that women have a worse prognosis and die more often than men after a heart attack or bypass surgery.
Adjunctive Drug Therapy and Secondary Prevention
The role of pharmacological therapy on the outcome of acute MI was
recently reviewed.79 80 81 Conclusions related to gender
differences in treatment efficacy are limited because the number of
women in many postinfarction intervention trials has been small,
probably because of upper age restrictions (as low as 65 years) where
prevalence of CHD increases in women.82 Clinicians may
refer to the ACC/AHA guidelines for the acute management of patients
with MI, including drug therapy, that were published in
1996.83 Treatment with ß-blockers is associated with a
21% reduction in mortality, a 30% decrease in sudden death, and a
25% lower reinfarction rate,84 85 with reportedly similar
benefits in women and men in some studies.37
The Survival and Ventricular Enlargement (SAVE) study
demonstrated that long-term therapy with an
angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor
decreased mortality and morbidity among MI survivors with left
ventricular dysfunction (ejection fraction
40%)86 and found the beneficial effect of ß-blockers
was additive in these patients who often are not prescribed
ß-blockers.81 87 ACE inhibitor therapy was
associated with a decreased rate of reinfarction in both the SAVE trial
and Studies of Left Ventricular Function (SOLVD),
suggesting potential antiatherogenic qualities of ACE
inhibitors.88 89 90 Short-term ACE
inhibitor therapy (<3 months) should be considered for
patients with no contraindications, and treatment may be continued up
to 3 years in patients with left ventricular
dysfunction.79
Calcium channel blockers, antiarrhythmic drugs, or intravenous magnesium are not recommended as standard therapy during or after an acute MI because they have not demonstrated a conclusive reduction in mortality in randomized trials.79 Nitrates may be considered for symptomatic relief of ischemic chest pain during or after MI. Few data are available to examine gender differences in quality of life or potential adverse side effects of many of these medications, and future research should address this issue.
In high-risk women with prior occlusive vascular events, lifestyle modifications and therapeutic interventions (discussed in the section on primary prevention) are applicable and of heightened importance. Women at high baseline risk of CHD have the most to gain from using the risk-reduction strategies above. For some interventions, such as aspirin therapy and cholesterol-lowering medications, the evidence for benefit in secondary prevention among women is much stronger than the evidence for primary prevention. A meta-analysis of randomized trials of aspirin documented that among both men and women with prior vascular disease, aspirin treatment reduced risk of subsequent cardiovascular events by about 25%.91
Lipid-lowering therapy also appears to provide substantial benefit in secondary prevention in women.18 Although data are limited (six trials have included women with CHD and hyperlipidemia), these studies suggest a >50% reduction in CHD mortality among the treated women.18 In the Cholesterol and Recurrent Events study, the one trial of patients with CHD and "normal" cholesterol levels, pravastatin therapy was associated with an even greater reduction (46%) in major coronary events among women than among men (20%).92 These data support the recent National Cholesterol Education Program recommendations for an LDL cholesterol treatment goal of <100 mg/dL for both men and women with CHD.93
According to a recent report from the multicenter Heart and Estrogen-Progestin Replacement Study (HERS) trial, women with CHD have been substantially undertreated for cholesterol elevations.94 In this study, <10% of women were within the ATP-II treatment goal of 100 mg/dL. The potential role of postmenopausal hormone replacement therapy in secondary prevention is addressed elsewhere. Stress reduction, relaxation, and psychosocial support show promise in reducing vascular events in patients with established coronary disease, but data are limited.95
Cardiac Rehabilitation
A recent secondary prevention consensus panel of the AHA found
compelling scientific evidence that comprehensive risk factor
interventions in patients with CHD extend overall survival, improve
quality of life, decrease the need for interventional procedures, and
reduce the incidence of subsequent MI.96 Cardiac
rehabilitation is a key step initiating the process of risk reduction
and restoration of functional capacity after a heart attack or
revascularization. It is an established treatment
that includes exercise training, risk factor modification, and
psychosocial and vocational counseling.97 Studies that
have included women suggest they have similar improvements in
functional capacity and other outcomes compared with
men.98 99 100
Despite the well-documented benefit of cardiac rehabilitation, utilization rates are extremely low. In a recent national survey on gender differences in cardiac rehabilitation programs after MI, women were found to be less likely to enroll in a program (6.9% versus 13.3%) or to undergo postbypass surgery (20.2% versus 24.6%) than men.101 In addition to lower program attendance, dropout rates are greater for women.99 The reasons for gender differences in participation in cardiac rehabilitation remain unclear but may be partly related to the degree of encouragement by the attending physician.98 Preferences for specific program features have suggested a lack of pain and fatigue during exercise as an important program feature, whereas convenience factors were rated as less important among women.102 Future research should identify patient-, physician-, and program-related barriers that limit use of cardiac rehabilitation services by women. Previous work has shown that post-MI patients not enrolled in cardiac rehabilitation programs receive less aggressive risk factor management; therefore, the issue of participation in cardiac rehabilitation is critical for women because they have a worse prognosis after cardiac events compared with men.103
| Stroke |
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The overall prevalence of stroke is higher in men than in women but increases with age in both gender groups.108 Results from the Cardiovascular Health Study show that prevalence for women aged 70 to 74 is 2.1% and increases to 7.8% for those aged 85 and older.109 There is also an ethnic difference in stroke prevalence among women. In the NHANES III (1988-1991) data, the crude prevalence of stroke was 1.9% for white women, 2.5% for African-American women, and 0.8% for Mexican-American women.109 The age-adjusted prevalence of stroke is also higher in blacks than in whites, and data suggest that blacks suffer more severe strokes.110
The incidence of stroke is about 19% higher in men than in women and increases with age (AHA, unpublished data, 1996). Among older adults the gender differences disappear after adjustment for age.111 However, the incidence of ischemic stroke for persons with a history of transient ischemic attacks (TIA) is higher in women than in men.112 Seasonal effects on the incidence of stroke in men and women have been suggested but not confirmed by all studies (AHA, unpublished data, 1996).113 114 115
Although the lifetime risk of stroke is higher in men, women are more likely to die of stroke, probably due to their older age at its occurrence and their longer life expectancy. Over an entire lifetime, about 16% of women will die of stroke, whereas only 8% of men will die of stroke.116 However, mortality rates over the last decades have been declining for both men and women. From 1984 through 1994 the mortality rate declined by 19.8%, although the actual number of deaths has been on the rise since 1993. 2 Results from the WHO MONICA (Monitoring Trends and Determinants in Cardiovascular Disease) project show a decline in case-fatality rates over a 5- to 6-year period through 1990 for 13 of 17 populations for men and 15 of 17 populations for women.117
Age and ethnicity are important predictors of survival among stroke victims. Mortality associated with stroke is higher in blacks than in whites.110 Results from the National Longitudinal Mortality Study118 showed that 5-year cumulative mortality rates from strokes (ICD-9-430-438) among three ethnic groups differed according to age at occurrence. Among the younger women, aged 45 through 59, mortality was highest among blacks (0.36%), followed by Hispanics (0.14%) and non-Hispanic whites (0.12%). Among all ethnic groups there were increasing stroke mortality rates with increasing age, but the greatest rate of change occurred in non-Hispanic white women. By age 75 and older, stroke mortality had increased to 3.92% in non-Hispanic white women, 4.07% in black women, and 1.85% in Hispanic women. These data suggest that excess stroke mortality observed in black women is attributable to the increased mortality that occurs at younger ages. For non-Hispanic white women, 5% of fatal strokes occur from ages 45 to 59, and 74% occur at age 75 and older.118
Risk Factors
Many identifiable risk factors for ischemic stroke in both
men and women have been fairly consistent over epidemiological
studies. They include hypertension, smoking, diabetes mellitus,
ischemic heart disease, atrial fibrillation, and
TIAs.112 119 120 121 122 Most epidemiological studies have not
provided gender-specific relative risks. However, Davis107
identified risk factors or conditions, some of which are rare but
nonetheless uniquely associated with stroke in women: fibromuscular
dysplasia, choriocarcinoma, mitral annular calcification, current
pregnancy, migraine, mitral valve prolapse, antiphospholipid syndrome,
Takayasu's arteritis, retinocochleocerebral vasculopthathy, and
systemic lupus erythematosis. (The relationship between hormone use
and stroke is addressed elsewhere in this report.)
Hypertension is clearly a major risk factor for stroke, with a 46% increase in stroke risk for every 7.5 mm Hg increase in diastolic blood pressure.123 In black women the risk of developing hypertension is more than twice that of white women.124 Several randomized placebo-controlled trials for treatment of hypertension in elderly women have shown substantial benefits for stroke morbidity and mortality. For example, both SHEP and the Swedish Trial in Old Patients (STOP) demonstrated reductions in stroke incidence among women who received the active drug for treatment of hypertension.12 125 Yet the results of several other randomized clinical trials suggest that treatment in women may not offer the same protection against stroke that it does in men, and further studies are needed to specifically address treatment issues in women.126
Current smoking habits are related to stroke risk for both men and women even after adjustment for age, gender, and hypertension.127 In the Finnmark Study, the adjusted relative risk for smoking was 1.64 for men and 2.12 for women.128 In the Nurses' Health Study, smoking increased the relative risk for ischemic stroke by a factor of 2.5 and for subarachnoid hemorrhage by 4.9. Results from this cohort study also demonstrate a reduction in risk for ischemic stroke with smoking cessation.107 129
Diabetes mellitus is associated with a doubling of ischemic stroke risk.112 One study among stroke patients with hypertension has shown diabetes is a significant predictor of ischemic stroke compared with hemorrhagic stroke in women but not in men.130 When all types of stroke are considered, data from the Framingham study yield an (adjusted) relative risk of 1.4 in men and 1.7 in women for the presence of diabetes.131 Not only does diabetes increase stroke risk, it increases severity and mortality associated with stroke.132
A number of studies have demonstrated increased risk of stroke associated with coronary diseases and conditions. Among older adults in the Cardiovascular Health Study, a significantly greater risk of stroke was associated with abnormal left ventricular wall motion and increased left ventricular mass, carotid stenosis, and atrial fibrillation.111 Another population-based longitudinal study found a number of coronary factors to convey an increased risk for ischemic stroke: congestive heart failure, angina pectoris, MI, ischemic heart disease, mitral valve disease, left ventricular hypertrophy, and atrial fibrillation. Investigators found that risk of stroke for normotensive persons with persistent atrial fibrillation was seven times greater than risk for normotensive persons without atrial fibrillation.112 Results from the Framingham Study indicate that risk of stroke associated with atrial fibrillation is greater in women than in men (RR 3.16 versus 1.83).131 Other studies have shown that younger patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation in the absence of other risk factors are not at increased risk of stroke.133 134 135
TIAs convey considerable risk for subsequent stroke.122 It is estimated that each year 50 000 Americans experience TIAs, and one third will experience a stroke (AHA, unpublished data, 1996). The risk of stroke is 13 to 14 times greater during the first year after a TIA and about 7 times greater during the first 5 years. However, risk is modified by age and subtype of TIA. Those with hemispheric TIA along with carotid stenosis >70% have a 40% increased risk of stroke during the next 2 years. Younger patients and those with isolated monocular visual symptoms have a lower risk.136 One group of investigators reported that, over a long period of follow-up, risk of stroke for both men and women among those with TIAs was more than fivefold that of those without TIAs; risk decreased with age; a history of TIA resulted in more then twice the risk for women than for men.112
Recently, attention has turned to hematologic factors, including hematocrit and white blood cell counts,137 infections and inflammations,138 psychosocial factors,139 140 and lifestyle141 as risk factors for stroke. Inconsistent results of homocyst(e)ine as a risk factor have been reported.142 143 144 Risk of stroke has been noted to be inversely related to stature among both men and women.128 Elevated serum creatinine has been documented as a significant risk factor in men, regardless of hypertensive status; studies in women are lacking.145 The presence of clinical proteinuria was seen as a significant predictor of thromboembolic and hemorrhagic stroke in a Finnish cohort of men and women.146
Treatment
To date there are no specific recommendations for treatment of
stroke in women, and recommendations for acute interventions for women
and men appear to be the same.122 For all stroke victims,
early detection and treatment are vital. Thrombolytic
therapy with r-TPA for acute ischemic stroke can be effective
for ischemic stroke patients when administered early in the
course of the event.147 Recently, a panel of the American
Heart Association Stroke Council reviewed the clinical trials of
thrombolytic drugs and established guidelines for
management of patients with acute ischemic
stroke.148 The guidelines call for early administration of
r-TPA when the time of stroke onset can be ascertained reliably and
with some specific exclusions. Ten percent of patients with acute
stroke develop hemorrhage with r-TPA. The panel also considered
the need for careful attention to ancillary care measures and
management of bleeding complications, and these are outlined in the
guidelines. Although treatment after the acute stage should focus on
the patient's particular risk factor profile and the pathogenesis of
the stroke, most care will include the use of antiplatelet
aggregating or antithrombotic agents such as aspirin, ticlopidine, or
warfarin.148 Secondary prevention may include aspirin for
both men and women. The Chinese Acute Stroke Trial
(CAST)149 has shown that early administration of aspirin
(within 48 hours of stroke onset) reduces stroke-related death and
recurrence. While women and men both received equal benefit
with aspirin therapy in this trial of secondary
prevention,149 the efficacy of aspirin use for primary
stroke prevention in women remains questionable.150 In
patients with TIA and atrial fibrillation, adjusted dose warfarin may
prevent stroke.151
Women who have symptomatic carotid stenosis of 70% to 99% may benefit from the combination of carotid endarterectomy and aspirin therapy. The risk of a second stroke is 26% at 2 years in those on antiplatelet therapy alone, compared with 9% with antiplatelet therapy combined with endarterectomy.152
| Peripheral Artery Disease |
|---|
|
|
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Besides claudication, commonly used criteria for diagnosing peripheral arterial disease include an ankle/brachial index (ABI); <0.9 determined by the ratio of systolic BP at the posterior tibial artery at the level of the ankle divided by the brachial artery pressure; flow velocity deficits measured by Doppler; the absence of posterior tibial or dorsalis pedis pulses; and intermittent claudication. In studies in which at least two of these criteria were used, prevalence rates ranged from 6% to 20%.156 157 Asymptomatic patients have survival rates that are not significantly different from those with symptoms, suggesting that claudication is not a reliable marker for severity of disease.158 Thus, when peripheral artery disease is considered a problem only in the presence of claudication, the majority of the population at risk is discounted. The ABI and measurements with a hand-held Doppler in an outpatient setting can reliably diagnose the majority of peripheral artery disease.159
Risk Factors
Smoking is the most consistently associated risk factor,
and prevalence rates in nonsmokers are less than half that of
smokers.157 Other risk factors include glucose
intolerance, increased body mass index, elevated blood pressure, and
elevated fibrinogen.157 160 161 The association between
peripheral artery disease and lipids is less definitive. In
the Cardiovascular Health Study, total and LDL
cholesterol were inversely associated with ABI in women but
not men.160 The San Luis Valley and Edinburgh studies
found an association between total cholesterol and
peripheral artery disease,157 162 whereas
there was no association in the Rancho Bernardo Study, in which
peripheral artery disease was strongly associated with
elevated triglycerides.161 Except for the
importance of smoking, the risk factor profile common in
peripheral artery disease shares features with the
metabolic syndrome163 : glucose intolerance
with low HDL cholesterol and often normal levels of LDL
cholesterol, with a large fraction of the LDL
cholesterol in a dense, more atherogenic
form.164 An association with the metabolic
syndrome in persons whose total and LDL cholesterol levels
are normal may explain the inconsistent associations for
lipids.
The degree of overlap in risk factors between peripheral artery disease and other major atherosclerotic CVD varies considerably by population and the diagnostic criteria applied. In the Cardiovascular Health Study peripheral artery disease was associated with increased carotid wall thickness, abnormal cardiac wall motion, and major electrocardiographic abnormalities.160 The Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study found peripheral artery disease to be the most important predictor of carotid thickness.165 In the Rancho Bernardo Study, a history of coronary disease or stroke was more than twice as common in women with peripheral artery disease than in women with normal peripheral arteries.164 Similarly, 25% of women with a history of coronary disease or stroke had peripheral artery disease, compared with an 11% prevalence of peripheral artery disease in women without this history.164 Typically, the more detailed the assessment of the arterial tree, the greater the concordance between peripheral arterial, coronary, and cerebrovascular diseases. The concordance of diagnoses ranges from about 20% to 60% for noninvasive measures to as much as 90% with angiography.166
Peripheral artery disease itself is a strong risk factor for other cardiovascular events and mortality. There is a threefold to fourfold increase in relative risk for all-cause mortality associated with peripheral arterial disease158 167 that does not differ by gender.158 The relative risk for cardiovascular death is between 4 and 6, and the relative risk for CHD death is between 4 and 7.158 167 Moreover, adjustment for risk factors and exclusion of persons with a history of other CVD at baseline does not attenuate these risks, suggesting that once manifested, the disease itself is an independent predictor of survival.158
Treatment
Smoking cessation is essential for any patient still smoking when
peripheral artery disease is recognized. Antiplatelet
therapy may be effective in reducing adverse
outcomes.168 169 Surgery is indicated for severe disease
and may reduce direct sequelae of poor peripheral
circulation, but, just as for coronary disease, a comprehensive
program of atherosclerotic risk reduction and exercise is necessary to
reduce risk of other cardiovascular events. Despite
ambiguity about the association between lipids and
peripheral artery disease, lipid-lowering therapy is likely
to be protective.170
| Hormones and Cardiovascular Disease |
|---|
|
|
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The WHO Study reported the association between current use of oral contraceptives and acute MI in more than 300 cases and age-matched controls.174 The overall odds ratio for MI was 5.01 (95% confidence interval, 2.54 to 9.90) in Europe and 4.78 (2.52 to 9.07) in developing countries. The absolute risk in nonsmoking women younger than 35 years was low, however: approximately 3 per million woman years. The risk was dramatically increased in older women who smoked, approximately 400 per million woman years, and in women with known hypertension whose blood pressure was not checked before prescription. Risk was not associated with dose or duration of use of estrogen and did not persist after oral contraceptives were discontinued.
Between 1991 and 1994, MI and use of oral contraceptives were compared with a California database.175 Most women were using low-dose oral contraceptives (<50 µg). After adjusting for major heart disease risk factors, the odds of MI in current oral contraceptive users compared with nonusers was 1.65 (95% CI=0.45 to 6.06). The odds ratio for prior use was not increased. The authors concluded that oral contraceptives do not increase the risk of heart attack in women who do not have risk factors for heart disease.
In the WHO study, more than 95% of stroke cases were classified as ischemic or hemorrhagic on the basis of a CT scan, MRI, or cerebral angiography performed within 3 weeks of the stroke. About 13% of all strokes in 20- to 44-year-old women in Europe and 8% in developing countries were attributable to oral contraceptives.173 Current use of oral contraceptives carried a nearly threefold increased odds of stroke in Europe (OR=2.99) and in non-European (developing) countries (OR=2.93).172 The odds ratios were lower in younger women, women who did not smoke, and women whose blood pressure had been checked before oral contraceptive prescription. However, the odds ratios exceeded 10 for women who had a history of hypertension. In Europe the odds ratio was less with oral conceptives containing <50 µg estradiol compared with higher-dose preparations (OR=1.53 versus 5.30), but no dose-related differences in stroke risk were seen in developing countries, possibly reflecting lower levels of CVD risk factors in these women. Risk was not increased with increasing duration of use or past use.
From 1985 to 1989 a case-control study of cerebral thromboembolism in 320 Danish women aged 15 to 44 years also found evidence for an estrogen dose-response effect, even among women taking low-dose regimens.176 In multivariate analysis, pills containing 50 µg estrogen were associated with an odds ratio for cerebral embolism of 2.9 compared with 1.1 for pills containing 30 to 40 µg estrogen. No increased risk was demonstrable with progestin-only pills.
Hemorrhagic stroke was also associated with oral contraceptive use in the WHO Study.173 The excess risk was statistically significant in developing countries (OR=1.75) but not in Europe (OR=1.38). Women younger than 35 who used oral contraceptives had no increased risk of stroke, while women with a history of hypertension had a 10-fold to 15-fold increased risk. Odds ratios among current cigarette smokers exceeded 3. Dose of estrogen, type of progestin, and duration of use were unrelated to risk of hemorrhagic stroke.
A California case-control study of over 1 million women conducted in a prepaid health plan between 1991 and 1994177 found no statistically significant excess risk of ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke associated with low-dose (<50 µg) estrogen oral contraceptives, although the upper bound of the 95% confidence intervals was 2.5. The authors postulate that the low risk reflects the low prevalence of hypertension and cigarette smoking in this cohort.
In the WHO Study,178 the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) was increased threefold to fourfold in oral conceptive users compared with nonusers. An unexpected higher risk in women using third-generation progestins led to a secondary analysis using data from nine countries and adding community controls in one center.179 For the progestins levonorgestrel, desogestrel, and gestodene, adjusted odds ratios for VTE in women taking combined low estrogen (<35 µg estradiol) were 3.4, 7.3, and 10.2, respectively, compared with nonusers.
The discovery that intrinsic coagulation factors play an important role in oral contraceptive-associated VTE180 has unquestionably been the most novel and exciting discovery in this field. Epidemiological studies have shown that the factor V Leiden mutation increases risk of VTE between five times and ten times. In the presence of the mutation, the risk of VTE associated with second- and third-generation oral contraceptives increased 30 times. A research group from the Netherlands181 has shown that second- and, to a greater extent, third-generation oral contraceptives induce resistance to the body's natural anticoagulation system (APC resistance). Women heterozygous for factor V Leiden who take oral contraceptives develop APC resistance as high as that seen in women who are homozygous for the factor V Leiden mutation. This information not only explains much about how the pill causes VTE but should make it possible to develop safer oral contraceptives and screening tests for women to detect coagulation defects.
In summary, new oral contraceptives carry a greatly reduced risk of CVD complications compared with other high-dose preparations, but third-generation progestins appear to greatly increase risk of VTE. Overall, the risk/benefit ratio is excellent except for women who smoke.
Postmenopausal Estrogen Therapy
Unlike oral contraceptives, which are usually taken for a single
purpose, postmenopausal estrogen is taken for a variety of reasons,
ranging from relief of current symptoms to prevention of future
osteoporotic fractures or CHD. In 1975 25 million prescriptions were
written for noncontraceptive estrogen, primarily conjugated equine
estrogen, in the United States; between 1982 and 1992 the number of
prescriptions increased from 13.6 to 31.7 million.182
Several reviews have summarized the results of prospective studies showing a remarkably consistent reduced risk of CHD183 184 185 and a somewhat less consistent reduced risk of stroke186 in women using postmenopausal estrogen in the United States and Europe. Similar studies are not available for women of color or from developing countries. Because the risk of CHD exceeds the risk of all other estrogen-associated conditions combined in the United States, and because estrogen use has been associated with reduced mortality from all causes combined,187 postmenopausal estrogen has been proposed as the standard of care in countries where heart disease is the leading cause of death and a major cause of morbidity in women.185 Based on meta-analyses of studies, most from the United States,184 185 postmenopausal estrogen is associated with a 35% to 50% reduced risk of CHD. On the basis of a calculation of overall risks and benefits, a healthy woman at no particular increased risk for heart disease, cancer, or osteoporosis would gain on average 1 additional year of life.185 As reviewed elsewhere,188 189 there are multiple mechanisms whereby estrogen might protect against CHD, including favorable changes in lipids, lipoproteins, fibrinogen and PAI-1, vasomotor effects, and antioxidant effects.
Despite the consistency and coherence of postmenopausal estrogenassociated cardioprotection, it is nevertheless possible that some or all of the association is an artifact explained by prescription, prevention, or compliance bias and differences in education and socioeconomic status.190 191 In a recent study,192 232 women who had used estrogen since menopause for an average duration of 17 years had nearly 50% lower mortality from all causes than age-matched nonusers (95% CI=0.38-0.76); reduced mortality was largely due to less fatal CVD. A report from the Nurses' Health Study 187 showed a reduced risk of nearly every disease except breast cancer. A recent Markov analysis193 postulated a 3-year increase in life expectancy associated with use of postmenopausal estrogen. Many studies in the United States have shown that women who are better educated and more affluent (well-established cardioprotective factors) are more likely to be prescribed postmenopausal estrogen and to take it. Recently this "healthy woman selection bias" has been strikingly documented by the Healthy Women's Study,194 which followed 355 premenopausal women through menopause. Women who later elected to take hormones were, when premenopausal, significantly more educated and had significantly more favorable levels of HDL cholesterol, blood pressure, fasting insulin, body weight, alcohol intake, and physical activity. Thus, the amount of protection attributed to estrogen may be exaggerated.
Nearly all of the studies describing cardiovascular protection included women using unopposed conjugated equine estrogen. Two recent US studies found similarly reduced cardiovascular risks for women taking estrogen plus a progestin, usually medroxyprogesterone acetate, suggesting that this combination is equally protective.195 196 These studies had relatively few events, however, and several new lines of evidence suggest that medroxyprogesterone acetate may mask or at least partially reverse estrogen-induced benefits. In the Postmenopausal Estrogen/Progestin Intervention (PEPI) study of 875 women,197 a 3-year placebo-controlled randomized double blind trial, HDL cholesterol levels rose significantly more in women assigned to unopposed conjugated equine estrogen than in women assigned to conjugated equine estrogen plus continuous or cyclic medroxyprogesterone acetate. Other studies show that medroxyprogesterone acetate can have a particularly deleterious effect on estrogen-induced improvements in vascular reactivity and atherosclerosis. For example, recent studies in nonhuman primates showed that conjugated equine estrogen alonebut not estrogen combined with medroxyprogesterone acetateimproved vascular reactivity of coronary arteries198 and prevented the progression of coronary artery atherosclerosis.199
Although long suspected, no increased risk of VTE in women taking postmenopausal estrogen was convincingly demonstrated until 1996, when two case-control studies of VTE200 201 and one prospective study of pulmonary emboli200 were published concurrently. All showed remarkably similar threefold to fourfold increased risk associated with PME. Although the relative risk was high, the absolute risk was low, owing to the infrequency of events with or without hormone therapy.
Two major US trials have been designed to quantitate the cardioprotective effect of postmenopausal estrogen unconfounded by healthy woman selection bias. HERS is a 5-year randomized placebo-controlled secondary prevention trial of conjugated equine estrogen plus medroxyprogesterone acetate in women who already have CHD. This study of 2673 postmenopausal women is planned to end in 1998. Unopposed estrogen is not being evaluated. The Women's Health Initiative (WHI), a placebo-controlled primary prevention trial in 27 500 postmenopausal women, is scheduled to complete randomization in 1998.203 The three major outcomes are CVD, osteoporosis, and breast cancer. Active treatments are conjugated equine estrogen alone for women without a uterus or conjugated equine estrogen plus continuous medroxyprogesterone acetate for women with an intact uterus, as compared with placebo. The WHI is planned to end in 2006. This trial will be the first to provide disease data in ethnic minority women on hormone therapy.
In summary, ongoing research suggests that estrogen replacement therapy reduces risk of CVD but may increase the risk of other diseases, including breast cancer and VTE. The potential benefits and risks need to be confirmed in randomized controlled clinical trials such as those now in progress, because no study can adjust properly for all the known and unknown selection factors that determine who takes estrogen. Until more definitive data are available, clinicians should individualize therapy based on a woman's baseline risk for CVD and should weigh the potential net benefit on overall health. Emerging data suggest selective estrogen receptive modulators, also known as designer estrogens, may have beneficial effects on the cardiovascular system as well as bone without untoward effects on breast or endometrial tissue.204 However, the clinical effectiveness of newer hormonal agents for disease prevention remains to be established.
| Conclusion |
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| Footnotes |
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A single reprint is available after October 14, 1997 by calling 800-242-8721 (US only) or writing the American Heart Association, Public Information, 7272 Greenville Avenue, Dallas, TX 75231-4596. Ask for reprint No. 71-0119. To purchase additional reprints: up to 999 copies, call 800-611-6083 (US only) or fax 413-665-2671; 1000 or more copies, call 214-706-1466, fax 214-691-6342, or
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L. H. Kuller, K. A. Matthews, K. Sutton-Tyrrell, D. Edmundowicz, and C. H. Bunker Coronary and Aortic Calcification Among Women 8 Years After Menopause and Their Premenopausal Risk Factors : The Healthy Women Study Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol, September 1, 1999; 19(9): 2189 - 2198. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. R. Goldstein, S. Jono, Y. Nishizawa, A. Shioi, and H. Morii Long-Term Therapy for Postmenopausal Osteoporosis: Stronger Bones but Weaker Arteries? • Response Circulation, July 27, 1999; 100 (4): 446 - 449. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. R. Wise, D. E. Stewart, P. Liu, and B. L. Abramson Use of hormone replacement therapy among cardiac patients at a Canadian academic centre Can. Med. Assoc. J., July 1, 1999; 161(1): 33 - 36. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. A. Grover Estrogen replacement for women with cardiovascular disease: Why don't physicians and patients follow the guidelines? Can. Med. Assoc. J., July 1, 1999; 161(1): 42 - 43. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. V. Pinkerton and R. Santen Alternatives to the Use of Estrogen in Postmenopausal Women Endocr. Rev., June 1, 1999; 20(3): 308 - 320. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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L. Mosca, S. M. Grundy, D. Judelson, K. King, M. Limacher, S. Oparil, R. Pasternak, T. A. Pearson, R. F. Redberg, S. C. Smith Jr, et al. Guide to Preventive Cardiology for Women Circulation, May 11, 1999; 99(18): 2480 - 2484. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M-G Bousser Migraine, Female Hormones, and Stroke Cephalalgia, March 1, 1999; 19(2): 75 - 79. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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M.-G. Bousser Stroke in Women : The 1997 Paul Dudley White International Lecture Circulation, February 2, 1999; 99(4): 463 - 467. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. Oparil Hormones and Vasoprotection Hypertension, January 1, 1999; 33(1): 170 - 176. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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E. Sbarouni, Z. S. Kyriakides, and D. T. Kremastinos The effect of hormone replacement therapy alone and in combination with simvastatin on plasma lipids of hypercholesterolemic postmenopausal women with coronary artery disease J. Am. Coll. Cardiol., November 1, 1998; 32(5): 1244 - 1250. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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G. G. Geary, D. N. Krause, and S. P. Duckles Estrogen reduces myogenic tone through a nitric oxide-dependent mechanism in rat cerebral arteries Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, July 1, 1998; 275(1): H292 - H300. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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