Advanced Search
Current and Breaking News for Professionals, Consumers and Media




Heart Health Author: University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center Last Updated: Sep 7, 2017 - 10:06:33 PM



Women Smokers Face Tougher Odds Than Men After Heart Attack

By University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center
Oct 4, 2011 - 8:40:49 AM



Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon Sign up for our Ezine
For Email Marketing you can trust


Email this article
 Printer friendly page
University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center study shows women who smoke suffer worse outcomes after heart attack, experience heart attacks earlier

(HealthNewsDigest.com) - ANN ARBOR, Mich. – Women who smoke have heart attacks at younger ages and are more likely than men to suffer complications months after a cardiac event, according to a new University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center study.

Although fewer women than men smoke in the United States, the gender gap is decreasing and the U-M findings suggest the toll of smoking is greater on women’s health.

“Smoking is not good for men or women but our analysis shows that women who smoke do worse six months after a heart attack than men,” says senior study author Elizabeth Jackson, M.D., cardiologist at the U-M Cardiovascular Center. “We were not able to look at the basic biological mechanisms that would account for this, but other studies can give us some ideas.

“The ideologies of acute coronary syndrome may be different and the atherosclerotic burden greater for women,” Jackson says.

Smoking reduces circulation by narrowing the blood vessels and contributes to an atherosclerotic build-up of plaque in the arteries. Cigarette smokers are two to four times more likely to develop heart disease than non-smokers.

Jackson and lead author Michael Howe, M.D., a cardiology fellow at the U-M Health System, conducted a study to examine smoking status of patients during and six months after an acute coronary syndrome event, such as a heart attack.

They used the U-M Health System’s acute coronary event registry which has data on 3,588 patients admitted to the U-M Medical Center from Jan. 1, 1999 to Dec. 31, 2006 with a diagnosis of ACS.

A reported 24 percent of patients were actively smoking. Male smokers were nine years younger than non-smoking men when admitted for their cardiac event. Women smokers were 13 years younger than non-smoking women when admitted.

Among smokers, gender was a significant factor for risk of complications after a heart attack. Six months after their cardiac event, 13.5 percent of female smokers needed emergency treatment to restore blood flow compared to 4.4 of male smokers who needed an unscheduled revascularization.

“The differences in outcomes among women smokers may reflect inherent biological differences between genders, or possibly less aggressive medical management of women that’s been described by other investigators,” Howe says. “Either way, it clearly emphasizes the need for increased physician awareness and vigilance, in women in particular, after an acute coronary event.”

The good news is that when you stop smoking, your risk of heart disease and stroke can be cut in half just one year later and continues to decline until it's as low as a nonsmoker's risk, according to the American Heart Association.

The gender differences study was published online ahead of print in the American Journal of Cardiology.


###

Additional U-M authors: Adam Leidal and Daniel Montgomery.

Reference: “Role of cigarette smoking and gender in acute coronary syndrome events,” doi:10.1016, American Journal of Cardiology.

Funding: Mardigan Foundation and the Hewlett Foundation.

Resource
University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center
http://www.uofmhealth.org/medical-services/heart-and-vascular

University of Michigan Women’s Heart Program
http://www.uofmhealth.org/medical-services/womens-health-heart

With all the health problems that cigarette smoking brings, it makes a lot of sense to quit cold turkey, with the help of smoking cessation aids, or sign up with an addictions treatment program.


###

Subscribe to our FREE Ezine and receive current Health News, be eligible for discounted products/services and coupons related to your Health. We publish 24/7.
www.HealthNewsDigest.com

For advertising/promotion, email: [email protected] Or call toll free: 877- 634-9180


Top of Page

HealthNewsDigest.com

Heart Health
Latest Headlines


+ Eating Eggs Can Boost Heart Health
+ Diet Helps Heart Patients Lose Weight
+ Heart Patient’s Fall Picks Up Something Big
+ Women’s Risk of Heart Disease Increased During the Pandemic
+ Severe Heart Attack Mortality Dropped in Second Year of COVID-19 Pandemic, But Still High in Unvaccinated
+ Low-dose Aspirin to Prevent Heart Issues Beneficial for Some
+ Keep Your Heart Healthy This Spring
+ Researchers Continue Total Artificial Heart Project
+ 1 in 4 Adults Has an Often-missed Liver Disorder Linked to Higher Heart Disease Risk
+ Why Women’s Risk of Heart Disease Increased During the Pandemic



Contact Us | Job Listings | Help | Site Map | About Us
Advertising Information | HND Press Release | Submit Information | Disclaimer

Site hosted by Sanchez Productions