Fiji Sun

Why women get heart attacks later than men

Women develop coronary artery disease (CAD) almost 10 years later than men

- Feedback: com.fj IANS nemani.delaibatik­i@fijisun.

Although women develop coronary artery disease (CAD) almost 10 years later than men as scientists have attributed this decade-long delay to the protective effects of sex hormones, the heart disease finally catches up with women owing to the presence of “fat-absorbing” XX hormones. There is a lot of evidence that hormones

like estrogen and progestero­ne protect the heart, but scientists had little data on the influence of the genetic component - the X chromosome - on the heart.

New research at the University of Kentucky has confirmed that the presence of XX sex chromosome­s increases the amount of fat circulatin­g in the blood, which leads to narrowing of the arteries and ultimately a higher risk of heart attacks and coronary artery disease. The team looked at lipids absorbed from the diet and made in the liver. “We looked at how our X sex chromosome­s were influencin­g the levels of lipids in the blood and in the arteries,” said Lisa Cassis, a researcher in the UK College of Medicine, in a paper published in the journal

What they found is that an XX sex chromosome combinatio­n promotes efficient use of fat. Women need fat to bear and feed babies, Cassis explained.

“We’re set up, potentiall­y through our XX sex chromosome­s, so that we can effectivel­y absorb that lipid from the diet and put it into our fat cells and maybe even make it in the liver.”

Cassis’s team studied chromosome effects in mice, and for this most recent discovery they were able to zero in on XX chromosome­s by removing hormones.

According to Yasir Al-Siraj, a postdoctor­al scholar and the paper’s first author, if the levels of circulatin­g lipids transporte­d by the blood are too high, they will start to accumulate in and on the artery wall, leading to plaque buildup. These plaques harden and narrow the artery, reducing blood flow to the vital organs. Everything is fine until women hit menopause and the protective effects of hormones disappear, leaving women with, what Cassis calls, “that XX thrifty, fat-absorbing kind of genotype.”

The team is looking at genes that are changed in the liver and in the intestine to find novel targets for drug developmen­t.

If they can find target genes that influence atheroscle­rosis, scientists can then explore the effects of existing drugs or develop new ones. These findings may also drive choice of diet for post-menopausal women.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji