Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA Department of Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA
Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA Department of Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA.
J Am Heart Assoc. 2016 Aug 24;5(9):e003630. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.116.003630.
Emerging data suggest that young women with coronary heart disease (CHD) are disproportionally vulnerable to the adverse cardiovascular effects of psychological stress. We hypothesized that younger, but not older, women with stable CHD are more likely than their male peers to develop mental stress-induced myocardial ischemia (MSIMI).
We studied 686 patients (191 women) with stable coronary heart disease (CHD). Patients underwent (99m)Tc-sestamibi myocardial perfusion imaging at rest and with both mental (speech task) and conventional (exercise/pharmacological) stress testing. We compared quantitative (by automated software) and visual parameters of inducible ischemia between women and men and assessed age as an effect modifier. Women had a more-adverse psychosocial profile than men whereas there were few differences in medical history and CHD risk factors. Both quantitative and visual indicators of ischemia with mental stress were disproportionally larger in younger women. For each 10 years of decreasing age, the total reversibility severity score with mental stress was 9.6 incremental points higher (interaction, P<0.001) and the incidence of MSIMI was 82.6% higher (interaction, P=0.004) in women than in men. Incidence of MSIMI in women ≤50 years was almost 4-fold higher than in men of similar age and older patients. These results persisted when adjusting for sociodemographic and medical risk factors, psychosocial factors, and medications. There were no significant sex differences in inducible ischemia with conventional stress.
Young women with stable CHD are susceptible to MSIMI, which could play a role in the prognosis of this group.
新出现的数据表明,年轻女性冠心病(CHD)患者易受到心理应激不良心血管影响。我们假设,与同龄男性相比,年轻但不是年长的女性 CHD 患者更有可能发生精神应激诱发的心肌缺血(MSIMI)。
我们研究了 686 例稳定型冠心病(CHD)患者(191 例女性)。患者在静息状态和精神(言语任务)及传统(运动/药物)应激试验下接受 99mTc-sestamibi 心肌灌注成像。我们比较了女性和男性之间可诱导缺血的定量(通过自动软件)和视觉参数,并评估了年龄作为效应修饰剂的作用。女性的社会心理状况比男性更差,而在病史和 CHD 危险因素方面差异较小。精神应激时,女性的定量和视觉缺血指标均明显大于男性。与男性相比,每减少 10 岁,精神应激时总逆转严重程度评分增加 9.6 个积分(交互作用,P<0.001),MSIMI 的发生率增加 82.6%(交互作用,P=0.004)。≤50 岁女性的 MSIMI 发生率几乎是同龄男性和年龄较大患者的 4 倍。当调整社会人口学和医疗风险因素、心理社会因素和药物治疗时,这些结果仍然存在。在传统应激下,可诱导缺血的性别差异无统计学意义。
稳定型 CHD 的年轻女性易发生 MSIMI,这可能在该组患者的预后中发挥作用。