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Diabetes Increases CVD Risk in Women More Than in Men
Diabetes can be a risk factor for heart disease, but for women, the condition can lead to worse outcomes than for men. Compared with their male counterparts, women with diabetes have a two-fold increased risk of heart disease. They’re also more likely to have heart attacks earlier, including fatal ones.
“Women with diabetes die more often after their first heart attack,” says Judith Regensteiner, PhD, director of the Center for Women’s Health Research at the University of Colorado School of Medicine in Aurora.
Differences in treatment may be partly to blame, according to Regensteiner.
“Women with diabetes get treated less acutely than men,” she says. “They also don’t get recommended for as many cardiac procedures.”
One study showed that in the year after a diabetes diagnosis, women were 10% less likely to use cholesterol-lowering drugs when compared with men. Women also were 7% less likely to use other heart-protective medication, according to the study.
In an American Heart Association (AHA) scientific statement, Regensteiner and fellow researchers note that sex hormones and cardiovascular risk factors likely play a part, too.
Many women already have heart disease, for example, or a number of risk factors for heart disease, when they’re diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. These include high cholesterol, high blood pressure, abdominal obesity, and abnormalities in blood vessel function. Research suggests high cholesterol is more common in women than men.
In a study published in the journal Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, researchers found that women had overall lower rates of control than men for risk factors associated with CVD, including blood sugar levels, blood pressure, cholesterol, and smoking status.
Darren McGuire, MD, a cardiologist and professor of internal medicine at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, says women tend to have a higher proportion of body fat than men when they’re first diagnosed with diabetes. Women with diabetes have higher markers for systemic inflammation as well, according to McGuire; this also may help explain why they’re more susceptible to heart problems.
McGuire agrees that treatment discrepancies play a part. “We’re not as good at treating women,” says McGuire, who is director of the Parkland Hospital and Health System Outpatient Cardiology clinics. “Whether it’s a problem with clinicians or patients or access to health care, it’s not clear. But it’s consistent.”
Women make up more than one-half of the population, yet clinical trials don’t often reflect that. More studies on women and sex differences are needed, Regensteiner says. “There’s so much yet to learn. That’s a problem as well as an opportunity.”
In the meantime, she says women must advocate for themselves, see a doctor regularly, and stay active. Observational studies suggest women with diabetes may need to exercise more often and more vigorously than men with diabetes to cut down on cardiovascular events.
Regensteiner suggests following the AHA’s recommendation of at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity or 75 minutes of vigorous aerobic activity a week, plus moderate- to high-intensity muscle-strengthening activity two days a week.
For aerobic activity, “briskly walking is enough if you’re regular with it,” she says. “As you increase your minutes of exercise … there are even more benefits both for women and men.”
Cholesterol guidelines issued last year by the American College of Cardiology and AHA suggest doctors talk to patients with diabetes about their cardiovascular risk, lifestyle, and the possible need for cholesterol-lowering drugs.
McGuire says every adult in general should be aware of and track total and LDL cholesterol, blood pressure, blood sugar, and BMI.
“And once diabetes is present,” McGuire says, “it’s about being very aggressive and very proactive.”
— Source: American Heart Association