30 Aug
Posted by admin as Uncategorized
Cardiovascular disease is the main cause of death in women in all countries of Europe (2). One in five European women die from coronary heart disease each year (2) and by 2020 coronary heart disease among women globally will have increased by 120 percent from the levels of 1990 (3). Women are more likely than men to have a second heart attack within six years of the first and are 50 percent more likely than men to die in the first year after a heart attack (4).
Tests for diagnosing coronary artery disease have been traditionally developed and tested in men. For example women make up only 38 percent of the participants in cardiovascular studies funded by the National Institutes of Health in the US (5). But women with coronary artery disease often complain of different symptoms from men1 and show clinical differences as well, with damage more often occurring in smaller blood vessels with fewer arterial blockages, a condition called microvascular disease (6). As a result, more women than men with heart conditions can show normal vessels in spite of their worsening symptoms (7). Negative or unclear tests in women can often mean heart disease goes missed and untreated.
Philips has been developing diagnostic tools which take gender differences
into account since the 1970s (8). The company’s latest advance is the
PageWriter TC50 cardiograph which allows healthcare professionals to easily and
efficiently take and record ECGs – tests of heart activity – assisting the
clinician in making a timely diagnosis. The PageWriter TC50’s sophisticated
analysis programme, the DXL Algorithm, uses different criteria for men and women
to help clinicians interpret cardiac symptoms, including identifying acute
global ischemia, the restrictions of blood supply to large areas of the heart.
“Philips understands that heart disease can be different in women than in men
and also harder to detect,” commented Joris van den Hurk, vice president of
cardiology programs for Philips Healthcare. “We work closely with leading
healthcare organizations, patients and clinicians to continually increase our
understanding of heart disease in women so that we can develop solutions, such
as the PageWriter TC50 and the DXL Algorithm, to improve the early detection of
heart disease in women.”
Philips is the first company to provide healthcare professionals with
comprehensive diagnostic tools which respond to recommendations by the American
Heart Association, the American College of Cardiology Foundation and the Heart
Rhythm Society for myocardial infarction and acute ischemia, including gender
and age-specific criteria
References:
http://www.texasheart.org/HIC/Topics/HSmart/women.cfm.
1. McSweeney JC, Cody M, O’Sullivan P et al. Women’s early warning symptoms of
acute myocardial infarction. Circulation 2003;108:2619-2623.
2. Allender S, Scarborough P, Peto V et al. European cardiovascular disease
statistics 2008. European Heart Network 2008: 1-112.
3.Murray CJL, Lopez AD, eds. The global burden of disease: a comprehensive
assessment of mortality and disability from diseases, injuries and risk factors
in 1990 and projected to 2020. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press on behalf
of the World Health Organization and the World Bank 1996.
4.Texas Heart Institute.
5.Harris DJ, Douglas PS. Enrollment of women in cardiovascular clinical trials
funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. New England Journal of
Medicine 2000; 343:475-480.
6.Mayo Clinic Health Letter. Small vessel heart disease. October 2007;
25(10):1-3.
7.Bugiardini R, Bairey-Merz CN. Angina with "normal" coronary arteries: a
changing philosophy. Journal of American Medical Association 2005; 293:477-484.
8.Internal data from Philips.
9.American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology Foundation/Heart
Rhythm Society. Recommendations for the standardization and interpretation of
the electrocardiogram, Part VI: Acute ischemia/infarction. Circulation
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