(Press-News.org) A new study indicates that in younger adults experiencing heart attacks and angina, men are more likely to receive faster care compared with women. The study, published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal) also found that gender-related factors affected access to care for both men and women.
To understand why sex differences in mortality exist in younger men and women with acute coronary syndrome, researchers included 1123 patients aged 18 to 55 years recruited from 24 centres across Canada, 1 in the United States and 1 in Switzerland. Of the participants, 362 (32%) were women and 761 (68%) were men. The median age for women was 50 and for men 49 years.
Within 24 hours after admission to hospital, patients completed a survey that asked about gender-related issues such as "traditional" masculine and feminine traits of personality, responsibility for housework, education level and health status before the event.
Women came from lower income brackets, were more likely to have diabetes, high blood pressure and a family history of heart disease, and had substantially higher levels of anxiety and depression than men.
Men received faster access to electrocardiograms (ECGs) and fibrinolysis than women, with door-to-ECG and door-to-needle times of 15 and 21 minutes and 28 and 36 minutes, respectively.
"Anxiety was associated with failure to meet the 10-minute benchmark for ECG in women but not in men," writes Dr. Louise Pilote, clinician-researcher, Division of Clinical Epidemiology at the Research Institute of McGill University Health Centre (RI-MUHC), Montréal, and professor of medicine at McGill University with coauthors. "Patients with anxiety who present to the emergency department with noncardiac chest pain tend to be women, and the prevalence of acute coronary syndrome is lower among young women than among young men. These findings suggest that triage personnel might initially dismiss a cardiac event among young women with anxiety, which would result in a longer door-to-ECG interval."
Patients visiting the emergency department with atypical symptoms or multiple risk factors also had longer treatment delays.
The researchers found, interestingly, that both men and women with feminine character traits were less likely to receive timely care than patients with masculine traits.
"A novel finding of our study was the identification of gender-related determinants of access to care," write the authors. "Men and women who reported higher levels of feminine personality traits, as well as those who reported being the person at home mainly responsible for housework, were … less likely to undergo invasive procedures."
The authors conclude that more specific management may be required for patients presenting to the emergency department with no chest pain, several risk factors or a feminine gender identity and role.
INFORMATION:
The study was conducted by researchers from McGill University, Concordia University and Research Centre, Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur de Montréal, University of Quebec at Montréal and the University of Montréal, Montréal, Quebec; University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC; Ben-Gurion University, Beer-Sheva, Israel; and the University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta.
Younger men receive faster care for heart attacks, angina compared with women of same age
2014-03-17
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Back to life after 1,500 years
2014-03-17
Researchers from the British Antarctic Survey and Reading University have demonstrated that, after over 1,500 years frozen in Antarctic ice, moss can come back to life and continue to grow. For the first time, this vital part of the ecosystem in both polar regions has been shown to have the ability to survive century to millennial scale ice ages. This provides exciting new insight into the survival of life on Earth.
The team, reporting in Current Biology this week, observed moss regeneration after at least 1,530 years frozen in permafrost. This is the first study to show ...
Fighting antibiotic resistance with 'molecular drill bits'
2014-03-17
DALLAS, March 17, 2014 — In response to drug-resistant "superbugs" that send millions of people to hospitals around the world, scientists are building tiny, "molecular drill bits" that kill bacteria by bursting through their protective cell walls. They presented some of the latest developments on these drill bits, better known to scientists as antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), at the 247th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS), the world's largest scientific society.
The meeting, which features more than 10,000 scientific reports across disciplines ...
Shale could be long-term home for problematic nuclear waste
2014-03-17
DALLAS, March 17, 2014 — Shale, the source of the United States' current natural gas boom, could help solve another energy problem: what to do with radioactive waste from nuclear power plants. The unique properties of the sedimentary rock and related clay-rich rocks make it ideal for storing the potentially dangerous spent fuel for millennia, according to a geologist studying possible storage sites who made a presentation here today.
The talk was one of more than 10,000 presentations at the 247th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS), the ...
How the science of deer hunting can help patients with diabetes
2014-03-17
DALLAS, March 17, 2014 — Body odor is a deer hunter's worst enemy, an alert to animals that an ominous presence is lurking, but the science behind suppressing it to give hunters an edge oddly enough could help researchers develop a life-saving device for diabetes patients. Scientists today presented the latest advances that tie together these two seemingly unrelated fronts at the 247th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS), the world's largest scientific society.
The meeting, attended by thousands of scientists, features more than 10,000 ...
Study finds that fast-moving cells in the human immune system walk in a stepwise manner
2014-03-17
VIDEO:
A team of biologists and engineers at UC San Diego applied advanced mathematical tools to answer a basic question in cell biology about how cells move and discovered that the...
Click here for more information.
A team of biologists and engineers at the University of California, San Diego has discovered that white blood cells, which repair damaged tissue as part of the body's immune response, move to inflamed sites by walking in a stepwise manner. The cells periodically ...
New reason to eat oats for heart health
2014-03-17
Dallas, TX, March 17, 2014: Eleven top scientists from around the globe presented the latest findings on the powerful compounds found in oats in a scientific session titled, Physicochemical Properties and Biological Functionality of Oats, at the 247th Annual Conference of the American Chemical Society in Dallas, TX. Scientists described research on the diverse health benefits of oats and emphasized the growing evidence that the type of phenolic compound avenanthramide (AVE) – found only in oats – may possess antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, anti-itch and anti-cancer properties. ...
Primary androgen deprivation therapy ineffective for most men with early prostate cancer
2014-03-17
WASHINGTON — A study of more than 15,000 men with early stage prostate cancer finds that those who received androgen deprivation as their primary treatment instead of surgery or radiation did not live any longer than those who received no treatment.
The research team, led by scientists at Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, say that the risks of serious adverse events associated with the treatment — which has been linked to impaired cognition, heart disease, diabetes and other disorders — "mitigates against any clinical or policy rationale for use of primary ...
New Research Brings the Cosmic Stars Much Closer to Earth
2014-03-17
Bayramov's research shows that propagating star-light is substantially deflected by the gravitational-flow. The substantial star-light deflection causes very small visible stellar parallax (visible star position deflection as Earth orbits the Sun). When not accounting for the substantial star-light curvature, using straight-line parallax calculation, main-stream science projects the closest stars to be many light years away, e.g. the closest known star - Proxima Centauri is projected to be 4.2 light years away.
By accounting for the substantial star-light deflection ...
2 Art Productions is Proud to Present Impulse a Mathieu Bitton Exhibition
2014-03-17
2 Art Productions - Presents to the City of Houston artist Mathieu Bitton and his exhibition, Impulse. Bitton is an internationally recognized photographer, director and one of the music world's most sought-after Art Director/Designers. The community is invited to attend this three day exhibition beginning May 30, 2014 and ending June 1, 2014 at Winter Street Studios, 2101 Winter St, Houston, TX 77008.
Mathieu Bitton's, Impulse is a multi-media photography exhibition that chronicles the artist's journey over the years. Winter Street Studios will be the host venue providing ...
Film Screening to Benefit Ronald McDonald House
2014-03-17
The film "Legends of the Knight" a documentary of how a fictional superhero has positively influenced ordinary people will be shown at Showcase Cinemas in East Greenwich, Rhode Island with proceeds to benefit the Providence Ronald McDonald's House.
The film, by Producer/Director Brett Culp was funded by 1,100 people around the world (through kickstarter.com) and presents examples of the positive influence of storytelling on people from all walks of life. The film is centered around the stories of Batman, the only fictional hero wihout "superpowers" ...