Why women may have better heart health than men as they age

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
A doctor listens to a male patient's heart with a stethoscopeShare on Pinterest
A new study finds that men tend to develop cardiovascular disease earlier than women. FG Trade/Getty Images
  • A new study examines differences in heart disease risk between males and females.
  • The researchers find that an increased risk in males begins much earlier in adulthood than expected.
  • More surprisingly, this effect was still present after controlling for other factors, such as the protective nature of female sex hormones.

Research, published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, finds that the incidence of cardiovascular disease reaches 5% in males seven years earlier than in females.

Specifically, by the age of 50.5 years, 5% of males have cardiovascular disease, but females do not reach this level until 57.5 years.

The analysis showed that this divergence in risk begins as early as 35 years of age.

Based on this, the authors suggest that the third decade of life should be a time for “more intensive screening and detection” in males.

However, there has been little research into the sex differences regarding other heart-related conditions, such as heart failure and stroke.

Alongside this question, the authors of the new paper sought to understand whether recent lifestyle changes might make a difference.

For instance, historically, males had higher rates of smoking, diabetes, and high blood pressure, all of which increase cardiovascular risk. More recently, this difference between sexes has almost disappeared.

How might these demographic changes influence sex differences in heart disease?

Their analysis demonstrated that males had a significantly higher “cumulative incidence” of cardiovascular disease, heart failure, and CHD. In other words, over the course of the study’s follow-up, a greater proportion of males than females developed one of the conditions in question.

However, they identified no difference in stroke incidence.

A similar, but less pronounced, effect was observed for CHD. The researchers found that males reached a 2% incidence around 10 years before females.

For stroke and heart failure, however, males and females were much more aligned. They reached 2% stroke and 1% heart failure incidence at a similar age.

Real difference starts at age 35

Importantly, the scientists concluded that the differences between males and females in cardiovascular disease, CHD, and heart failure started diverging at the age of 35. The authors write:

“We quantify, for the first time, that sex differences in 10‐year CVD event rates first emerge at age 35 and persist throughout middle adulthood.”

Medical News Today contacted Dr. Raj Dasgupta, chief medical advisor for Sleepopolis, for comment. “Up until the early 30s, risk levels are similar, but by about age 35, men begin to accumulate risk faster than women,” he explained.

“This divergence happens well before most routine screenings are recommended, even though we know cardiovascular disease is something that develops over decades,” he said.

In agreement, the authors of the study write that “the fourth decade of life is a critical life period” and that more intensive screening and detection of subclinical cardiovascular disease may be warranted to help prevent future disease.

Diet is one of the most important pillars of a Healthy heart. As Kowey told MNT, “The consumption of ultra-processed food is off the charts, spurred by popular advertising, and clearly has a detrimental effect on cardiac Health.”

The fact that these foods tend to be more cost-effective than fresh produce helps explain why poverty helps fuel the obesity epidemic, he told us.

Dasgupta suggested people should primarily focus on consuming “vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes, lean proteins, and healthy fats” and limiting “sugary drinks and excessive sodium.”

Dasgupta also explained that the Mediterranean diet, or DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet, has the best supporting evidence when it comes to heart health. MNT has a guide to the DASH diet and Mediterranean diet for more details.

Share this Article