Survival After Heart Attack Improves In Younger Women

In recent years, women, particularly , experienced larger improvements in hospital mortality after (MI) than men, according to a study published in the Oct. 26, 2009 issue of .

Over the several studies showed that , but not older ones, are more likely to die in the hospital after MI than age-matched men. A team of examined whether such mortality differences have declined in recent years.

“We found that the number of who die in the hospital after a heart attack, compared with men in the same age group, has narrowed over the last few years,” says Viola , MD, PhD, professor of medicine (cardiology), and director of the Emory Program in Cardiovascular and Epidemiology. says changes in and treatments over time accounted in part for the changing .

Often referred to as a heart attack, MI occurs when the to part of the heart is interrupted. This decreased is commonly due to blockage of a coronary artery and if left untreated can cause damage and/or death (infarction) of .

The researchers investigated MI according to sex and age in five age groups during a 12-year period from 1994 to 2006. The included 916,380 MI patients from the of () who had a confirmed diagnosis of MI.

The researchers found that hospital mortality declined markedly between 1994 and 2006 in all patients, but more so in women than in men in virtually every age group. The in 2006 relative to 1994 was largest in women under the age of 55 years (53 percent) and lowest in men under the age of 55 years (33 percent). In patients younger than 55, the absolute decline in mortality was three times larger in women than in men (2.7 percent vs 0.9 percent).

The in mortality decline became progressively lower in older patients. As a result, the death rate in compared with men was less pronounced in 2004-06 than in 1994-95.

(Arch Intern Med. 2009;169[19]:1762-1766 and 1767-1774.)

Source:
Jennifer Johnson
Emory University

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