Sex and Gender and Allostatic Mechanisms of Cardiovascular Risk and Disease

Cardiovascular diseases are leading causes of mortality and morbidity in adults worldwide. Multiple studies suggest that there are clinically relevant sex differences in cardiovascular disease. Women and men differ substantially in terms of prevalence, presentation, management, and outcomes of cardi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian journal of cardiology 2022-12, Vol.38 (12), p.1812-1827
Hauptverfasser: Longpré-Poirier, Christophe, Dougoud, Jade, Jacmin-Park, Silke, Moussaoui, Fadila, Vilme, Joanna, Desjardins, Gabriel, Cartier, Louis, Cipriani, Enzo, Kerr, Philippe, Le Page, Cécile, Juster, Robert-Paul
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cardiovascular diseases are leading causes of mortality and morbidity in adults worldwide. Multiple studies suggest that there are clinically relevant sex differences in cardiovascular disease. Women and men differ substantially in terms of prevalence, presentation, management, and outcomes of cardiovascular disease. To date, however, little is known about why cardiovascular disease affects women and men differently. Because many studies do not differentiate the concept of sex and gender, it is sometimes difficult to discriminate sociocultural vs biological contributors that drive observed clinical differences. Female sex has some biological advantages in relation to cardiovascular disease, but many of these advantages seem to disappear as soon as women develop cardiovascular risk factors (eg, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia). Furthermore, stress and allostatic load could play an important role in the relationship between sex/gender and cardiovascular diseases. In this narrative review, we argue that chronic stress and psychosocial factors might better encompass the patterns of allostatic load increases seen in women, while biological risk factors and unhealthy behaviours might be more important mechanisms that drive increased allostatic load in men. Indeed, men show allostatic load patterns that are more associated with impaired anthropometric, metabolic, and cardiovascular functioning and women have greater dysregulation in neuroendocrine and immune functioning. Thus gender-related factors might contribute to the pathogenesis of cardiovascular disease especially through stress mechanisms. It is important to continue to study the mechanisms by which gender influences chronic stress, because chronic stress could influence modifiable gendered factors to promote cardiovascular disease prevention. Les maladies cardiovasculaires figurent parmi les principales causes de morbidité et de mortalité chez les adultes du monde entier. De nombreuses études révèlent des différences entre les sexes pertinentes sur le plan clinique en ce qui concerne la maladie cardiovasculaire. La prévalence, le tableau clinique, la prise en charge et les résultats diffèrent considérablement chez les hommes et les femmes. À ce jour, on en sait toutefois peu sur les raisons pour lesquelles la maladie cardiovasculaire touche différemment les hommes et les femmes. Comme de nombreuses études ne font pas de distinction entre les concepts de sexe et de genre, il est parfois diffic
ISSN:0828-282X
1916-7075
DOI:10.1016/j.cjca.2022.09.011