Women's Blood Vessels Age Quicker Than Men's. Are We Flipping the Coin to The Other Side?
Contrary to long-held beliefs that males are more at risk of heart disease than women, new study suggests that women's blood arteries mature quicker than men's.
A landmark study published on January 15, 2020 in the journal JAMA Cardiology revealed that blood pressure, an indicator of heart disease risk, rose much faster in women than in men. This is the first study to show that women's main and minor arteries age more quickly than men's.
This groundbreaking study comprised 144 599 blood pressure measures from 32 833 participants (54 percent of whom were female) during a 43-year period (1971 to 2014) in four community-based US cohort studies. Researchers discovered that blood pressure in women began to rise as early as 30 and continued to rise faster than in males.
The results of this groundbreaking study refute the long-held belief that vascular and cardiovascular disorders in women trail behind males by 10-20 years. This research emphasises the necessity of women maintaining normal blood pressure.
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