Women Have Less Chest Pain, More Deaths

Not only are women with heart attacks less likely to have chest pain than men, but those without this symptom are more likely to die, a new study finds. The difference was especially strong among younger women. Recent research has shown that women and men may have different heart attack symptoms. The new study provided more information. It used records from 1.1 million heart attack patients. They were seen at U.S. hospitals between 1994 and 2006. About 42% of women and 31% of men did not have chest pain or pressure. Nearly 15% of women died in the hospital, compared with 10% of men. The average woman having a heart attack was 74, compared with 67 for men. But younger women, under age 65, were 24% to 30% more likely to die in the hospital than men the same age. Both men and women were more likely to die if they did not have chest pain.

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