Heart attack risk up to 4 times higher in pregnancy
NEW YORK, Mar 29 (Reuters) Despite the low rates of heart attack in women of reproductive age, the risk is increased by three or four times compared with women who are not pregnant, according to a new study. Overall, the researchers estimate that 6 in 100,000 pregnant women will have a heart attack.
The findings, published in the journal Circulation, also suggest that risks increase with age, with pregnant women over 40 years old 30-times more likely to have a heart attack than pregnant women under the age of 20.
''Even if numbers are low, this represents a dramatic increase,'' lead author Dr. Andra James, from Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina, told Reuters. ''However, obstetrician-gynecologists haven't thought much about the problem.'' James noted that in 2002-2003, birth rates rose six per cent for women between 35 and 39 years, and five per cent for women between 40 and 44. ''More and more women over the age of 35 are having children. Since risks increase with age, when a pregnant women comes in with chest pains, we can't just assume that it's not a heart attack.'' James' team conducted the first national survey assessing the frequency, mortality rate and risk factors for pregnancy-related heart attacks in the United States between 2000 and 2002.
Among 12.6 million deliveries, 859 heart attacks were reported (6.2 per 100,000 pregnancies), and in five per cent of these cases the woman died, according to the authors.
Besides the age-related risk factors, conditions such as high blood pressure, diabetes and smoking also increase the risk. For example, ''high blood pressure increases the risk another 20 times over the three- to four-fold increase; diabetes another four times; smoking another eight times,'' James continued.
''For a long time we thought that estrogens are heart protective.
It's only recently that the hormone has been implicated in cardiovascular diseases,'' she added. ''We don't prescribe birth control pills to women who smoke and who are over 35, so we should also be more aggressive in counseling women on the risks associated with pregnancy.'' REUTERS CS RAI0910


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