Author/Authors :
Sumeet S. Chugh، نويسنده , , Kiyon Chung، نويسنده , , Zhi-Jie Zheng، نويسنده , , Benjamin John، نويسنده , , Jack L. Titus، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background
Between 1989 and 1998 there was a 21% increase in estimated sudden cardiac death among US women aged 35 to 44 years. In contrast, the sudden cardiac death rate in age-matched men showed a decreasing trend (−2.8%). Due to under-representation of younger adults in published autopsy series, etiologies of sudden cardiac death merit further investigation.
Methods
We reviewed autopsy and detailed cardiac pathologic findings in younger women (age 35-44 years) from a 270-patient, 13-year (1984-1996) autopsy series of sudden cardiac death, and performed comparisons with findings in age-matched men.
Results
Women aged 35 to 44 years constituted 32% of all women in the series compared to men, who constituted 24% of total men (P = .004 vs women). A presumptive cause of sudden cardiac death could not be determined in 13 women (50%). Among women, 6 cases (22%) had significant coronary artery disease. Findings in others included coronary artery anomalies (n = 3), myocarditis (n = 2), hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (n = 1), coronary artery dissection (n = 1) and accessory pathway (n = 1). In younger men, a presumptive cause of sudden cardiac death remained undetermined in only 24% (P = .025 vs younger women), and coronary artery disease accounted for 40% of cases.
Conclusions
In younger women, despite autopsy and detailed cardiac pathologic examination, an attributable cause of sudden cardiac death was not determined in 50% of cases; a 2-fold increase compared to men of the same age. Given the dynamic and multifactorial nature of sudden cardiac death, comprehensive population-based investigations are likely to be necessary to further investigate this unexpected sex-based disparity.