Close X
Friday, December 27, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Women tend to ignore heart symptoms more

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Oct, 2014 08:12 AM
  • Women tend to ignore heart symptoms more
Partly due to a perception that coronary artery disease is a "man's disease", women are more likely to delay seeking care when heart symptoms strike, a research has found.
 
"The main danger is that when someone comes to the hospital with a more severe or advanced stage of heart disease, there are simply fewer treatment options available," said lead study author Catherine Kreatsoulas from Harvard School of Public Health.
 
The study included patients with suspected coronary artery disease, just prior to undergoing their first coronary angiogram test.
 
In the first part of the study, the researchers interviewed cardiac patients about their experience of angina and their decision to seek medical care.
 
Angina is the pain that occurs when your heart does not get as much blood and oxygen as it needs because of a blockage of one or more of the heart's arteries.
 
This pain is often described as a pressure, tightness or burning feeling. It is a warning signal that you are at increased risk of a heart attack, cardiac arrest or sudden cardiac death.
 
"Women stayed in the denial period longer than men. While men would consult with a friend or loved one more readily about the symptoms, women would wait for others to tell them they looked horrible," Kreatsoulas said.
 
"Women displayed more of an optimistic bias, feeling that the symptoms would pass and get better on their own," she said.
 
This finding was substantiated in the second part of the study where women were one and half times more likely than men to wait for symptoms to become more severe and more frequent before seeking medical attention.
 
Other priorities could be taking over, Kreatsoulas suggested, such as women's focus on caregiving roles or even risk aversion.
 
Coronary artery disease is a leading cause of mortality for women.
 
The study presented at the Canadian Cardiovascular Congress.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Mother's alcohol consumption may make kids dull

Mother's alcohol consumption may make kids dull
Expecting mothers may give their drinking glass a goodbye kiss as researchers have found that parental alcohol exposure weakens brain activation in their children....

Mother's alcohol consumption may make kids dull

Baked or broiled fish improves brain health

Baked or broiled fish improves brain health
Baked or broiled fish once a week is good for your kid's brain, regardless of how much omega-3 fatty acids it contains, says a study....

Baked or broiled fish improves brain health

Video games cause deviant behaviour in teens: Study

Video games cause deviant behaviour in teens: Study
Teenagers who play mature-rated, risk-glorifying video games are more likely to engage in alcohol use, smoking cigarettes, delinquency and risky sex, says a study....

Video games cause deviant behaviour in teens: Study

New mother and sleepy? Avoid work for now

New mother and sleepy? Avoid work for now
Are you a new mother and cannot figure out why you are still sleepy and tired at work even four months after birth? Get your maternal leave extended to catch some sleep....

New mother and sleepy? Avoid work for now

Sleep deprivation can take your job

Sleep deprivation can take your job
If you are not sleeping well and enough, apart from health problems, you also run the risk of making bad financial decisions and even losing your job....

Sleep deprivation can take your job

Chronic pain may make you lethargic

Chronic pain may make you lethargic
If you are suffering from chronic pain, it may affect the brain in such a way that it decreases your motivation level even after popping painkillers, says a study....

Chronic pain may make you lethargic