Women tend to develop heart disease about
10 years later than men, and new research suggests this is partly due to
women's bodies being better at compensating for insensitivity to insulin, which controls blood sugar.
The study found
that among people with insensitivity to insulin, women were less likely than
men to have risk factors for heart disease and diabetes, such as high blood
pressure and triglycerides. This, in turn, could delay the onset of heart
disease, the researchers said.
The findings were published today (Sept. 24) in the Journal of
Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism.
Blood sugar
After eating carbohydrates, blood sugar rises. The pancreas
produces insulin, a hormone that tells the body's cells to take up glucose from
the bloodstream, thereby lowering blood sugar back to normal.
But some people's bodies are insulin-resistant, meaning their cells require a much higher amount of
insulin to take up glucose from the blood.
When people develop insulin resistance, initially their blood
sugar levels may remain normal, but over time, their bodies can no longer
produce enough insulin to keep blood sugar levels in a healthy range.
At this point, people may develop metabolic syndrome,
a group of five risk factors including high blood sugar, triglycerides and
blood pressure, low levels of good cholesterol and a large waist. Metabolic
syndrome can be a precursor to diabetes and heart disease.
Protective effect
Dr. Sun Kim, an endocrinologist at Stanford University Medical School, and
her colleagues wanted to understand the factors that affected this process.
They asked 468 women and 354 men to fast overnight.
Afterward, they injected the participants with glucose, insulin
and a hormone that prevents the body from producing its own insulin, and then
measured the participants' blood sugar a few hours later. The test allowed them
to measure the exact relationship between insulin levels and blood sugar.
Women under 50 with insulin resistance, meaning they had high
blood sugar after a meal, somehow avoided the risk factors associated with
metabolic syndrome and heart disease. But as women aged, that advantage disappeared, and older women
who were insulin-resistant had the same heart disease risk factors as men.
"Younger women, when they are resistant, are able to handle
the complications a lot better," Kim said.
Still, it's not clear why younger women have some protection
against heart disease. One possibility is that the hormones that affect the
menstrual cycle play a role.
But the role of female hormones isn't clear-cut: For instance,
giving women synthetic versions of hormones such as estrogen doesn't have the
effects seen in the study, Kim
said.
Either way, there are things that insulin-resistant people can
do to avoid the onset of Type 2 diabetes and heart disease.
"The two lifestyle things that are closely associated with
insulin resistance are gaining weight, and being sedentary," Kim told.
Exercising and losing weight are the best ways to reverse insulin resistance,
she said.
Source;
http://newsletter.dole.com/2013/why-heart-disease-strikes-women-later-than-men/?lang=en
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