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Early HRT Protects a Woman's Heart


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The HRT findings come from the WISE (Women's Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation) study, which included women with some coronary artery disease. While women who started HRT before the age of 45 saw a protective effect, those who started replacement therapy later saw more disease. The study was sponsored by the U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI).

The findings were not consistent with those of the Women's Health Initiative, leading NHLBI cardiologist and study co-author Dr. George Sopko to say, "I'm somewhat surprised by that. In our cohort, many -- if not most -- of these women had uninterrupted hormonal status. There was not a gap between the decline of reproductive hormone levels and the start of replacement therapy, and maybe that is one of the key elements."

Oral contraceptives are one of the most frequently used drugs in the world with 100 million women taking them, yet there is not nearly as much heart research into contraceptives as there is into HRT.

Text Continues Below



This Belgian study found a 20 percent to 30 percent increased prevalence of plaque in the carotid and femoral arteries for every 10 years of exposure to oral contraceptives.

Does this mean women should be wary of taking the pill?

"That is a question for a philosopher, not a physician," said study lead author Dr. Ernst Rietzschel, of Ghent University's department of cardiovascular disease and public health. "We don't prescribe oral contraceptives so women will live longer. Women take them, because they want contraceptives, and contraceptives have been an enormous force for a lot of women to fulfill their rightful role in society. I believe the options should stay open, maybe not for very long time frames."

Two additional studies presented Tuesday found gender differences in how women "present" with heart disease and how they respond to treatment.

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Copyright © 2007 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 11/6/2007

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SOURCES: Nieca Goldberg, M.D., American Heart Association spokeswoman, and medical director, Women's Heart Program, New York University School of Medicine, New York City; Nov. 6, 2007, presentation with William Herzog, M.D., Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore; Pam Peterson, M.D., assistant professor of medicine, Denver Health Medical Center and University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center; Ernst Rietzschel, M.D., department of cardiovascular disease and of public health, Ghent University, Belgium; Nov. 6, 2007, American Heart Association annual meeting, Orlando, Fla.


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