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. 2002 Jul;56(7):555-9.
doi: 10.1136/jech.56.7.555.

Gender differences in clinical status at time of coronary revascularisation in Spain

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Gender differences in clinical status at time of coronary revascularisation in Spain

M D Aguilar et al. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2002 Jul.

Abstract

Objective: To study gender differences in clinical status at the time of coronary revascularisation.

Design: Retrospective study of clinical records. Two stage stratified cluster sampling was used to select a nationally representative sample of patients receiving a coronary revascularisation procedure in 1997.

Setting: All of Spain.

Main outcome measures: Odds ratios (OR) in men and women for different clinical and diagnostic variables related with coronary disease. A logistic regression model was developed to estimate the association between coronary symptoms and gender.

Results: In the univariate analysis the prevalence of the following risk factors for coronary heart disease was higher in women than in men: obesity (OR=1.8), hypertension (OR=2.9) and diabetes (OR=2.1). High surgical risk was also more prevalent among women (OR=2.6). In the logistic regression analysis women's risk of being symptomatic at the time of revascularisation was more than double that of men (OR=2.4).

Conclusions: Women have more severe coronary symptoms at the time of coronary revascularisation than do men. These results suggest that women receive revascularisation at a more advanced stage of coronary disease. Further research is needed to clarify what social, cultural or biological factors may be implicated in the gender differences observed.

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