Women with acute coronary syndrome were more likely to present without chest pain than men, but this absence did not indicate greater coronary disease severity.
Are there sex differences in symptom presentation among young patients with acute coronary syndrome?
While young women with ACS are more likely to present without chest pain than men, chest pain remains the most common symptom for both, and its absence does not indicate less severe coronary disease.
Absolute Event Rate: 0% vs 0%
Chest pain was the most common ACS symptom in both sexes. Although women were more likely to present without chest pain than men, absence of chest pain was not associated with markers of coronary disease severity. Strategies that explicitly incorporate assessment of common non-chest pain symptoms need to be evaluated.
Nadia Khan (Mon,) reported a other. Women with acute coronary syndrome were more likely to present without chest pain than men, but this absence did not indicate greater coronary disease severity.
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