What is the current survival probability of heart disease shift?

According to the Daily Mail, a recent study found that the mortality rate of female patients with heart disease after operation is twice that of male patients with heart disease. Although the overall mortality rate of heart disease has shown a downward trend in recent years, this study shows that the difference in survival rate between male and female heart patients has shown an expanding trend. The study also found that female patients with heart disease are less likely to survive for more than 5 years after operation than male patients.

This study was completed by the British and Irish Cardiovascular Surgery Association, and it is the largest study in this field so far. The researchers followed up 4, cases of heart surgery. Ben bridgewater of the University Hospital of South Manchester, the author of the study, said the study confirmed the previous findings. Previous studies have found that female patients with heart disease are usually more serious than male patients.

Ben bridgewater said that the reason for the higher postoperative mortality rate of female patients with heart disease has not been ascertained, but women usually think that heart disease is a "patent" of men, and delayed treatment may be one of the reasons. Medical experts say that the clinical symptoms of heart disease in women are not as typical as those in men. Male patients often have chest tightness, compression and contraction as the main symptoms; Female patients with heart disease mainly have symptoms such as back pain, abdominal pain, shortness of breath, nausea, indigestion or abnormal fatigue, which are often elusive. Moreover, the mortality of male patients has shown a downward trend, but the incidence of heart disease in women is increasing day by day. According to European medical data, 55% of European women die of heart disease, while 43% of men die of heart disease.