Cardiology is the medical specialty focused on the heart and the cardiovascular system. It involves the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of conditions affecting the heart and blood vessels. These conditions include coronary artery disease, heart failure, arrhythmias (irregular heartbeats), and valve disorders. The field covers a broad spectrum, from congenital heart defects present at birth to acquired conditions like heart attacks.
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Diagnosing heart disease in women requires a nuanced approach. Because women’s biology and symptoms differ from men’s, the standard “one size fits all” diagnostic pathway often fails them. A woman might pass a traditional stress test with flying colors yet still have significant heart disease. This scenario happens because the tests were originally designed to find large blockages in large arteries, which is the male pattern of disease. Women, with their smaller vessels and diffuse plaque, often slip through the cracks of these older protocols.
Modern cardiology is adapting. Doctors now use more sensitive imaging and specific testing protocols to catch the subtle signs of female heart disease. The goal is to look beyond the obvious obstructions and evaluate the function of the entire cardiovascular system, from the main highways to the tiniest backroads. This section explores the tools used to uncover the truth about a woman’s heart health.
The treadmill stress test is the workhorse of cardiology. You walk on a treadmill while hooked up to an ECG monitor. For men, this test is quite accurate. For women, it is notoriously less reliable. Women have a higher rate of “false positives” (the test says there is a problem when there isn’t) and “false negatives” (the test says everything is fine when it isn’t).
Breast tissue can interfere with the electrical signals, making the ECG difficult to read. Furthermore, women often have lower exercise capacity or conditions like arthritis that make completing the test difficult. Because of these limitations, doctors often skip the simple treadmill test for women and move directly to imaging stress tests, which provide a visual picture of the heart muscle.
To get a clearer picture, doctors use stress echocardiograms or nuclear stress tests.
A stress echocardiogram uses ultrasound waves to take pictures of the heart before and after exercise. It allows the doctor to see if the heart walls are moving normally. If a section of the heart muscle stops moving well during exercise, it suggests a blockage. This test is non-invasive, has no radiation, and is generally more accurate for women than the ECG alone.
A nuclear stress test involves injecting a tiny amount of radioactive tracer. A special camera takes pictures of blood flow to the heart at rest and during stress. The procedure is excellent for detecting microvascular disease, which is common in women. If the scan shows widespread poor blood flow but the arteries look open, it points to a problem with the tiny vessels.
A cardiac CT scan is a powerful tool for risk assessment. It is a quick, noninvasive X-ray scan that looks for calcium deposits in the coronary arteries. Calcium is a marker of plaque. A “calcium score” of zero is ideal. A high score means there is significant plaque burden.
For women, this test is a fantastic tie-breaker. If a woman has vague symptoms and intermediate risk factors, a calcium score can clarify her risk. A high score might prompt the doctor to start statin therapy or aspirin immediately, even if her cholesterol isn’t sky-high. CT Angiography (CTA) goes a step further, using dye to visualize non-calcified (soft) plaque, which is more common in younger women and prone to rupture.
The coronary angiogram involves threading a catheter into the heart and injecting dye to see the arteries on an X-ray. For a long time, the coronary angiogram has been the preferred method for diagnosing blockages. However, for women, it has limitations.
An angiogram is great at seeing big blockages in big arteries. It is not good at seeing the diffuse, spread-out plaque common in women or the microscopic vessel problems of microvascular disease. A woman can have a “clean” angiogram and still be in danger. Therefore, if an angiogram looks normal but symptoms persist, the doctor should perform additional functionality tests during the angiogram to check for vessel spasms or microvascular dysfunction.
Since microvascular disease (MVD) is a female-predominant condition, testing for it is vital. This is often done during a coronary angiogram using a “provocative” test. The doctor injects medication (like acetylcholine or adenosine) into the arteries to see how they react.
In a healthy heart, the vessels should dilate (get wider). In a heart with endothelial dysfunction or MVD, the vessels might constrict (spasm) or fail to dilate, causing chest pain and ECG changes. This functional testing proves that the pain is real and cardiac in origin, even if no large blockage is seen. Non-invasive options like cardiac MRI or PET scans can also be used to measure blood flow reserves, providing a diagnosis without the invasive catheter.
Blood tests for women go beyond basic cholesterol. Doctors look for markers of inflammation, specifically high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP). Women tend to have higher baseline levels of CRP, and elevated levels are a stronger predictor of heart attacks in women than in men.
Hormonal panels are also relevant. Checking thyroid function is important, as thyroid issues (common in women) can cause arrhythmias and affect cholesterol. For women with PCOS or diabetes, monitoring insulin levels and HbA1c is critical. During a suspected heart attack, the high-sensitivity troponin test is used. Since women often have smaller heart attacks that release less troponin, using the “high sensitivity” version is crucial to avoid missing a diagnosis.
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Not always. Since it is often regarded as a screening test, you may need to cover the cost yourself, typically between $100 and $300. However, the information it provides is often worth the cost for risk assessment.
Trust your body. False negatives are common in women. Ask for further testing, such as a calcium score, a CTA, or a referral to a specialist in women’s heart health or microvascular disease.
The radiation dose from nuclear tests and CT scans is generally considered safe and low risk, especially compared to the risk of missing a serious heart condition. Doctors always aim to use the lowest effective dose.
Not directly. It shows the result of a blockage (a wall not moving well), but it cannot see the plaque inside the artery. A CT or angiogram is needed to see the blockage itself.
The thyroid hormone regulates heart rate and metabolism. An overactive thyroid causes a racing heart (atrial fibrillation), while an underactive thyroid raises cholesterol and blood pressure. It is a common cause of heart symptoms in women.
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