Men and women (focus on sex differences in cardiovascular ageing)
Sex differences in cardiovascular ageing and disease presentation are driven by both lifelong intrinsic biological differences and midlife hormonal changes.
Despite recent progress in identifying and narrowing the gaps in cardiovascular outcomes between men and women, general understanding of how and why cardiovascular disease presentations differ between the sexes remains limited. Sex-specific patterns of cardiac and vascular ageing play an important role and, in fact, begin very early in life. Differences between the sexes in patterns of age-related cardiac remodelling are associated with the relatively greater prevalence in women than in men of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. Similarly, sex variation in how vascular structure and function change with ageing contributes to differences between men and women in how coronary artery disease manifests typically or atypically over the adult life course. Both hormonal and non-hormonal factors underlie sex differences in cardiovascular ageing and the development of age-related disease. The midlife withdrawal of endogenous oestrogen appears to augment the age-related increase in cardiovascular risk seen in postmenopausal compared with premenopausal women. However, when compared with intrinsic biological differences between men and women that are present throughout life, this menopausal transition may not be as substantial an actor in determining cardiovascular outcomes.
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Allison A. Merz
Susan Cheng
Heart
Harvard University
Brigham and Women's Hospital
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Merz et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d56cf475589c71d767cf04 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/heartjnl-2015-308769