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Lupus
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Sex differences in the epidemiology and outcomes of heart disease: population-based trends

V Vl Roger

S J Jacobsen

S A Weston

S E Gabriel

Division of Cardiovascular Diseases and Internal Medicine; Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota, USA

We examined trends in heart disease (HD) mortality and the delivery of cardiac in Olmsted County, MN. Between 1979 and 1994, women experienced 51% of the total number of HD (ICD9 codes 390 — 398,402,404 — 429) deaths (3095). Age-adjusted HD mortality rate declined from 123 per 100,000 (95%CI 102, 144) in 1979 to 81 (67,95) in 1994. The risk ratio (RR) of HD death in 1994 compared to 1979 was 0.69 for women vs 0.53 for men (P = 0.06). This equates to a decline in HD mortality of 2.5%=y in women and 4.2%=y in men. The decline in HD mortality was less pronounced in older age groups (P < 0.001), reflecting a shift of the burden of HD towards women and the elderly. Compared to men, there was less use of stress tests among women, of cardiology visits after stress testing, and of cardiac procedures among women presenting to the emergency room with unstable angina. Further studies are needed to examine causal links between these trends.

Key Words: women • heart disease • outcome

Lupus, Vol. 8, No. 5, 346-350 (1999)
DOI: 10.1177/096120339900800503


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