Gender role more important than sex in repeat heart attacks: McGill study - Action News
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Gender role more important than sex in repeat heart attacks: McGill study

Regardless of gender, people with more traditional feminine personality traits have a harder time recovering after a heart attack, a study led by McGill University researchers shows.

Regardless of gender, people with more traditionally feminine traits more likely to suffer 2nd ACS incident

A Montreal cardiologist inspects an echocardiogram of a patient's heart. Researchers from the MUHC co-authored a study linking gender roles to heart attacks. (CBC)

Regardless of their biological sex, people with more traditional feminine personality traits have a harder time recovering after a heart attack than those with more traditionally masculine traits, a study led by McGill University researchers shows.

In fact, a person's gender identity was found to be a better predictor of suffering recurrentacute coronary syndrome (ACS) and major adverse cardiac events (MACE) such as heart attacksthan their biological sex.

ACS is the general term for a group ofconditions in whichblood flow in the coronary arteries is decreased or blocked, preventing the heart muscle from functioning properly.

"The study means that gender also matters in terms of explaining differences between men and women," the study's lead author, Dr. Louise Pilote, told CBC Montreal's Daybreak.

Pilote is also the director of the McGillUniversity Health Centre'sGeneral Internal Medicine division.

The study was published in the current issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

1,000 patients surveyed

The study looked at about 1,000 people from across Canada, aged 18 to 55, who had been hospitalized for ACSbetween January 2009 and April 2013.

The participantswere asked to fill out a detailed survey about their gender roles, to determine wherethey fall on a spectrum between traditionally masculine or feminine.

For example, the survey asked respondentsthe number of hours theyspentcarrying out household chores andtaking care of children, as well astheir salary.

Both men and women with traits traditionally associated with women had a higher incidence of a second heart attack within 12 months after their first one.

Anxiety could play role

The study didn't answer why the risk of repeated heart attacks among more participants with more feminine traits was higher.

However, this same group also showed a higher incidence of anxiety, and Pilote said this could be one explanation.

"For example, financial difficulties or the need to manage housework, childcareand work may represent a daily burden, and chronic anxiety may result," Pilote said.

The study's authors hope their findingswill lead more researchers to consider gender roles along with biological sex when studying diseases between men and women.