Disease features and management of cardiomyopathies in women.
Alberto AimoPaolo MorfinoChiara ArzilliGiuseppe VergaroValentina SpiniIacopo FabianiVincenzo CastiglioneClaudio RapezziMichele EmdinPublished in: Heart failure reviews (2024)
Over the last years, there has been a growing interest in the clinical manifestations and outcomes of cardiomyopathies in women. Peripartum cardiomyopathy is the only women-specific cardiomyopathy. In cardiomyopathies with X-linked transmission, women are not simply healthy carriers of the disorder, but can show a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations ranging from mild to severe manifestations because of heterogeneous patterns of X-chromosome inactivation. In mitochondrial disorders with a matrilinear transmission, cardiomyopathy is part of a systemic disorder affecting both men and women. Even some inherited cardiomyopathies with autosomal transmission display phenotypic and prognostic differences between men and women. Notably, female hormones seem to exert a protective role in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) and variant transthyretin amyloidosis until the menopausal period. Women with cardiomyopathies holding high-risk features should be referred to a third-level center and evaluated on an individual basis. Cardiomyopathies can have a detrimental impact on pregnancy and childbirth because of the associated hemodynamic derangements. Genetic counselling and a tailored cardiological evaluation are essential to evaluate the likelihood of transmitting the disease to the children and the possibility of a prenatal or early post-natal diagnosis, as well as to estimate the risk associated with pregnancy and delivery, and the optimal management strategies.
Keyphrases
- pregnancy outcomes
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- heart failure
- pregnant women
- breast cancer risk
- cervical cancer screening
- left ventricular
- preterm birth
- oxidative stress
- young adults
- gene expression
- smoking cessation
- genome wide
- insulin resistance
- hepatitis c virus
- multiple myeloma
- type diabetes
- atrial fibrillation
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv infected
- glycemic control