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Saturday, August 13, 2011

Why women have fewer heart attacks: Oestrogen protects against blocked arteries Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2025008/Why-women-fewer-heart-attacks-Oestrogen-protects-heart-disease.html#ixzz1UtVntlTB


The sex hormone oestrogen protects women from heart attacks and may explain why they are far less likely to be struck down than men, claim scientists.
Around one in five men in Britain die from a heart attack, compared to just one in seven women.

They have discovered that this naturally-occurring chemical helps stop blood cells sticking to the walls of arteries and forming potentially fatal blockages.

Researchers from Queen Mary at the University of London think their findings  may explain why women are far more likely to suffer heart attacks after the menopause, when their oestrogen levels decline.

Around one in five men in Britain die from a heart attack, compared to just one in seven women.

But while very few women suffer heart attacks before their 50s, the risk suddenly increases after the menopause when they are just as likely to be struck down than men.

Until recently experts have struggled to explain why younger women are less likely to develop heart disease and suffer heart attacks.

Now research published in the journal Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology claims that the hormone oestrogen may protect them.

But experts say their findings do not necessarily mean that oestrogen could  ever be used in drugs to prevent heart disease. 



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