"I’ve always lived a healthy
lifestyle," says Tasya Lacy from Columbus, Ohio, who has been teaching
hula-hoop fitness classes for years. Yet, the day before Easter 2016, at age
50, she had a heart attack.
"I was exhausted and felt like I pulled
muscle in my back," Tasya, now 54, recalls. "My husband rubbed my
shoulders and felt my heart racing. He told me we we're going to the hospital.
I didn’t think I needed to.”
Doctors found 99% blockage in Tasya’s main
coronary artery, requiring three stents.
It’s common for women to miss signs of a heart
attack because they present differently from men. A man is more likely to have
chest pains, a woman may experience flu-like symptoms: nausea and vomiting,
excessive sweating, exhaustion, or pain in their arm or back.
Listening to your body could be the difference
between and life and death. Literally. According to the American Heart Association (AHA), cardiovascular disease is the No. one killer
of women, causing one in three deaths each year. Often because they ignored the
symptoms. And, 20% of women age 45 or older who have who have a heart attack
will have a second heart attack within five years of their first.
CVS Health is the national presenting sponsor of
Go Red for Women — the American Heart Association’s heart health movement to
end heart disease and stroke in women.
MinuteClinic® offers chronic care management and
preventative care all year long, including measuring risk factors for heart
disease. “We’ve expanded our available health care services for patients with
certain chronic conditions such as diabetes, high cholesterol and high blood
pressure,” shares Angela Patterson, Chief Nurse Practitioner, MinuteClinic.
“Our providers are able to screen, assess, treat and monitor these conditions,
as well as order lab tests, recommend lifestyle changes, prescribe medications
and educate patients about their conditions.”
There's one more risk factor exclusive to women:
menopause.
"The combination of estrogen and
progesterone before menopause seems to provide a protective element against
heart disease in women," explains Allan Stewart, MD, Medical Director for
HCA East Florida’s Miami-Dade Cardiovascular Surgery Programs. However, once a
woman goes through menopause, her risk of heart attack increases significantly.
Tasya was post-menopausal when she had her heart
attack. Now she knows a simple truth about her health — when in doubt, always
seek medical care.
Get
proactive with preventive care
Visit a MinuteClinic to learn your personal
health numbers — a starting point for a discussion with your health provider on
your risk for heart disease:
·
total cholesterol
·
blood pressure
·
blood sugar
·
body mass index (BMI)
https://www.cvshealth.com/thought-leadership/womens-heart-attacks-arent-like-mens?CVSLinkedIn&linkId=82971582
No comments:
Post a Comment