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Women less likely than men to change
habits that increase heart-disease risk
Newswise — Smoking,
eating fattening foods and not getting
enough exercise are all lifestyle habits
that can lead to poor health and
cardiovascular disease – more so if you have
a family history. But researchers at UT
Southwestern Medical Center have found that
women don’t change these habits as often as
men, even when they have relatives with
heart disease.
The scientists,
reporting in the September issue of the
American Heart Journal, found that women
with a family history of heart disease are
less likely than men to change habits such
as smoking and infrequent physical activity.
They also are more
likely to engage in lifestyle choices that
increase their risk of heart disease than
are women who did not report a history of
heart disease.
“A family history of
heart disease is as important an indicator
of future cardiovascular health in women as
it is in men – perhaps more important,” said
Dr. Amit Khera, assistant professor of
internal medicine and senior author of the
study.
“And yet there is an
underappreciation of cardiovascular-disease
risk among young women, which may contribute
to unfavorable trends in important lifestyle
choices such as quitting smoking and
increasing physical activity.”
Researchers looked at
data from more than 2,400 people between the
ages of 30 and 50. Family history of
premature heart disease was defined as a
first-degree relative with history of heart
attacks before the age of 50 in men and 55
in women.
They analyzed the link
between family history of heart disease and
risk factors for cardiovascular disease in
women such as coronary artery calcification,
risk perception and lifestyle choices in
young women and compared the data with their
young, male counterparts.
“Although the
prevalence of cardiovascular disease is
generally low for young women, the
consequences can be more severe,” Dr. Khera
said. “For instance, women are twice as
likely as men to have fatal heart attacks.”
The researchers used
data from the Dallas Heart Study – a
multi-ethnic, population-based study of more
than 6,000 patients in Dallas County
designed to examine cardiovascular disease.
Participants came for three office visits
for blood pressure and heart-rate
measurements, participated in detailed
in-home surveys, and had imaging tests that
looked for calcium buildup in the coronary
arteries.
Those with family
histories of heart disease had an increased
prevalence of early heart disease, such as
buildup of fatty deposits and calcium in the
arteries.
Young women with family
histories of heart disease had the highest
rate of tobacco use (40 percent compared to
25.2 percent of females without
cardiovascular disease histories) and had
elevated unhealthy body-mass index rates (51
percent compared to 44.4 percent for females
without histories) despite a slightly lower
rate of sedentary lifestyles (40.1 percent
compared to 43.9 percent).
The data from males
showed narrower differences in both tobacco
use (37 percent for those with family
histories, 34.8 for those without) and high
BMI readings (38.1 percent compared to 30.3
percent) while also revealing more regular
activity (20.7 percent of men with family
histories of heart disease reported
sedentary lifestyles compared to 38.2
percent for those without histories).
“It’s important that
women get this message and make appropriate
lifestyle changes. The earlier you make
lifestyle changes, the more you decrease
your risk factors for heart disease in the
future,” Dr. Khera said. “It’s equally
important that physicians ask questions
about family history because you don’t need
a blood test or any fancy diagnostic tests
to uncover a trend. If a patient has a
family history of heart attacks, they have
an increased risk of heart disease and
warrant further studies and more aggressive
risk factor changes.”
Other UT Southwestern
authors of the study were Dr. Mahesh Patel,
internal medicine resident; Dr. James de
Lemos, associate professor of internal
medicine; Dr. Patrice Vaeth, adjunct
assistant professor of internal medicine;
and Dr. Darren McGuire, associate professor
of internal medicine.
The Dallas Heart Study
is funded by the Donald W. Reynolds
Foundation. The National Institutes of
Health also provided funding for this study.
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