Daily Dispatch

The woman tackling the ‘heart attack gender gap’

Renowned cardiologi­st Angela Maas tells Isla Whitcroft migraines and early menopause are risky for female hearts

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Professor Angela Maas will never forget the moment she realised that she was failing her female patients. It was the early Nineties, and she was treating a woman who had typical symptoms of heart disease — shortness of breath, fatigue, sporadic chest pains — but for whom no diagnosis could be found.

Up until that time Prof Maas had been dealing with her female patients as she had been taught during her cardiology training, that is, in exactly the same way as men, even if it was clearly not working. “I learnt that women sometimes had weird, anomalous symptoms, or that they imagined things, or that they just didn’t take their medication properly,” she explains down the line from the University of Radboud Medical Centre in the Netherland­s, where she is now based, one of the leading cardiologi­sts of her generation.

“Their concerns were dismissed, and if their condition deteriorat­ed it was probably somehow their fault. I accepted that.

“However, one day this patient got really angry with me, shouting that I wasn’t listening or giving her any answers.

“She woke me up. I was being paid to look after her health and I was failing her.

“At the same time, research was beginning to be published propoundin­g the groundbrea­king possibilit­y that, when it came to cardiology, women might need to be treated differentl­y.

“These papers were saying that cardiologi­sts should discrimina­te between the sexes,” says Prof Maas. “Most of my colleagues thought this was a laughable idea and carried on treating women as ‘mini-men’. But I remembered my patient, so I started to examine this disparity.”

What Prof Maas discovered would profoundly change how she practised cardiology. It would also lead to her new book, A Woman’s Heart, currently a best-seller in her native Holland, where she lays bare how the disparity between the sexes impacts on everything from symptoms to diagnoses to outcomes.

Still now, she says, too many women are themselves unaware of the danger of heart disease, often considerin­g it to be a “man’s condition”, even though it is by far the biggest killer of women in the UK, killing twice as many as breast cancer.

“Frankly, cardiology for women and for men are almost two different diseases and they should be treated as such,” says Prof Maas, who opened her first female outpatient clinic in 2003.

Thanks to the work of Prof Maas and others, awareness of the “gender heart attack gap” and its impact on health outcomes is improving, but the statistics are still worrying.

A 2019 report by the British Heart Foundation found women were 50 percent more likely to receive an incorrect diagnosis after a heart attack, and significan­tly less likely to receive the correct aftercare, resulting in 8,200 needless deaths over a 10-year period.

Recently, research from Florida has shown that women recovering from a heart attack have fewer complicati­ons and a lower risk of dying when they are treated by a female cardiologi­st.

Prof Maas says the difference­s start at a basic physiologi­cal level. As women age, and particular­ly as oestrogen levels drop, they tend to develop stiffness and diffuse narrowing of the arteries that supply the heart.

In men this atheroscle­rosis occurs in one specific place, as a blockage, whereas in women the damage is more widespread.

Women are more likely to suffer from cardiac spasms, also known as angina, a short-lived pain or discomfort, often described as a heavy ache, in the chest that can spread to the arms, neck, jaw, back or stomach, or a squeezing pressure around the heart.

So while the symptoms of male and female coronary disease can be similar — shortness of breath, spreading pain, nausea, faintness — it is much more challengin­g to spot in women than men, especially, as Prof Maas drily notes, given the diagnostic process has been developed by and for men.

“Usually if heart disease is suspected the first test will be an exercise test — incidental­ly, designed to be fitted to a man’s flat chest rather than a rounded female one — which, because it is a snapshot, will probably not witness a spasm,” she explains.

“Then, a coronary angiogram will spot a blockage in an instant, but rarely arterial spasm and microvesse­l damage.”

Prof Maas believes middleaged women who complain of upper chest pain should have a completely different initial diagnostic test, such as one to determine calcificat­ion in the arteries.

With women under the age of 65 twice as likely to die of a heart attack as men, careful and extensive patient history is also vital.

“With men we look for risk factors such as family history, weight, smoking, high cholestero­l, high blood pressure and so on. With women, the doctor must look wider,” says Prof Maas.

One risk factor for women that is still poorly recognised is a history of migraines. “It is almost as if the vascular contractio­ns that cause migraines move to the area around the heart, which is of course very dangerous.

“Similarly, a history of early menopause, or high blood pressure, pre-eclampsia and recurrent miscarriag­es are all warning signals. If the doctor doesn’t ask about these things, then the woman should tell them anyway.”

Treatments for heart disease work differentl­y in women, too. “Whilst an arterial blockage can be opened up with a stent or a balloon you can’t really do the same with arterial damage that you see [in women],” she says.

“Women often react badly to medication such as statins, because of difference­s in the breakdown of drugs in the female body.

“Instead of just stopping their medication, the doctor could consider putting her on a thrice weekly rather than daily regimen.” Despite everything, she is optimistic — awareness is improving in the medical profession and treatments are being developed for cardiac spasms.

“Women, too, are learning to help themselves,” she adds. “As they have become more economical­ly independen­t, they are more assertive — like my patient from a long time ago — and less likely to accept poor quality answers. Women today often have a higher expectatio­n of good health than their mothers did. They want to live longer and better.

“My profound hope is that my book informs and empowers women to ask the right questions and to demand the best possible treatment. It is their right and we owe it to them.”

So while symptoms of male and female coronary disease can be similar — shortness of breath, spreading pain, nausea, faintness it is — much more challengin­g to spot in women than men Professor Angela Maas, University of Radboud Medical Centre, Netherland­s

 ?? Picture: 123rf.com ?? HEART HEALTH: Too many women are unaware of the danger of heart disease, often considerin­g it to be a "man's condition".
Picture: 123rf.com HEART HEALTH: Too many women are unaware of the danger of heart disease, often considerin­g it to be a "man's condition".
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