Heart disease in women: Understand symptoms and risk factors

Know the symptoms and risks unique to women, and learn how a heart-healthy diet and exercise can help protect you.

By Mayo Clinic Staff

Heart disease is the most common cause of death for both women and men in the United States. But some heart disease symptoms in women can differ from those in men. Knowing the symptoms of a heart attack and heart disease may help save a life.

Heart attack symptoms for women

Chest pain is the most common symptom of heart attack in men and women. But women are more likely than men to have symptoms that may seem unrelated to a heart attack, such as nausea and brief pain in the neck or back.

Women often describe heart attack chest pain as pressure or tightness. But it's possible to have a heart attack without chest pain.

Women are more likely than men to have these symptoms of a heart attack:

  • Neck, jaw, shoulder, upper back or upper stomach pain.
  • Shortness of breath.
  • Pain in one or both arms.
  • Nausea or vomiting.
  • Sweating.
  • Lightheadedness or dizziness.
  • Unusual fatigue.
  • Heartburn, also called indigestion.

These symptoms may be vague but more noticeable than the chest pain.

Compared with men, women tend to have symptoms more often when resting, or even when asleep. Emotional stress can play a role in triggering heart attack symptoms too.

Women are more likely than men to have a heart attack with no severe blockage in an artery. When this happens, it's called nonobstructive coronary artery disease.

Also, women tend to have blockages not only in their main arteries but also in the smaller ones that supply blood to the heart. A blockage in the smaller arteries is called small vessel heart disease or coronary microvascular disease.

When to see a doctor

If you have symptoms of a heart attack or think you're having one, get emergency medical help right away. Don't drive yourself to the hospital unless you have no other way to get there.

Heart disease risk factors for women

Heart disease risk factors include high cholesterol, high blood pressure and obesity. They affect both women and men. But other things may play a bigger role in the development of heart disease in women.

Women are more likely than men to have health conditions that increase the risk of heart disease such as:

  • Smoking. Smoking is a greater risk factor for heart disease in women than it is in men.
  • Not being active. A lack of physical activity is a major risk factor for heart disease.
  • Emotional stress and depression. Stress and depression may affect women's hearts more than men's. Depression may make it difficult to maintain a healthy lifestyle and follow recommended treatment for other health conditions.
  • Diabetes. Women with diabetes are more likely to develop heart disease than are men with diabetes. Also, because diabetes can change the way people feel pain, there's an increased risk of having a silent heart attack. A silent heart attack is one that happens without symptoms.
  • Menopause. Low levels of estrogen after menopause increase the risk of developing small vessel heart disease.
  • Pregnancy complications. High blood pressure or diabetes during pregnancy can increase women's long-term risk of high blood pressure and diabetes. These conditions also make women more likely to get heart disease.
  • Family history of early heart disease. This appears to be a greater risk factor in women than in men.
  • Other health conditions. Some autoimmune diseases, such as lupus and scleroderma, and inflammatory conditions also raise the risk of heart disease.

Everyone should take heart disease seriously. Women under age 65 — especially those with a family history of heart disease — should pay close attention to heart disease risk factors.

Lifestyle and home remedies

Living a healthy lifestyle can help reduce the risk of heart disease. Try these heart-healthy steps:

  • Do not smoke or use tobacco. Smoking damages blood vessels. It is a major risk factor for heart disease. If you smoke and can't quit, talk with your healthcare team about programs or treatments that can help.
  • Eat a healthy diet. Choose whole grains, fruits and vegetables, low-fat or fat-free dairy products, and lean meats. Eat less salt and sugar. Don't eat saturated or trans fats.
  • Exercise and keep a healthy weight. If you're overweight, losing even a few pounds can lower your risk of heart disease. Ask your healthcare team what weight is best for you.
  • Manage stress. Stress can cause the arteries to get tight. This can increase the risk of heart disease, particularly coronary microvascular disease. Some ways to beat stress are to get more exercise, practice mindfulness and connect with others in support groups.
  • Limit alcohol. If you choose to drink alcohol, do so in moderation. For healthy adults, that means up to one drink a day for women and up to two drinks a day for men.
  • Control blood pressure, blood sugar and cholesterol. Make lifestyle changes and take medicines as directed. Get regular health checkups.
  • Get good sleep. Poor sleep may increase the risk of heart disease and other health conditions. Adults should aim for 7 to 9 hours daily.

Exercise and heart health

Regular activity helps keep the heart healthy. In general, try to get at least 30 minutes of moderate exercise, such as walking at a brisk pace, on most days of the week. If that's more than you can do, start slowly and build up. Even five minutes a day of exercise has health benefits.

For a bigger health boost, get about 60 minutes of moderate to vigorous exercise a day, five days a week. Also do strength training exercises two or more days a week.

It's OK to break up your workouts into several 10-minute sessions during a day. You'll still get the same heart-health benefits.

Interval training switches between short bursts of intense activity and lighter activity. It can help people keep a healthy weight and improve blood pressure. To do this, try adding short bursts of jogging or fast walking into your regular walks.

You can also add exercise to your daily activities with these tips:

  • Take the stairs instead of an elevator.
  • Walk or ride your bike to work or to do errands.
  • March in place while watching television.

Heart disease treatment in women

In general, heart disease treatment in women and in men is similar. It can include medicines, angioplasty and stenting, or coronary artery bypass surgery.

Some differences in heart disease treatment among men and women are:

  • Women are less likely to be treated with aspirin and statins to prevent future heart attacks than are men. However, studies show the benefits are similar in both groups.
  • Women are less likely than men to have coronary artery bypass surgery. This may be because women have less obstructive disease or smaller arteries with more small vessel disease.
  • Cardiac rehabilitation can improve health and aid recovery from heart disease. However, women are less likely to be sent to cardiac rehabilitation than men are.

Taking aspirin to prevent heart disease in women

If you've had a heart attack, your healthcare professional might tell you to take low-dose aspirin every day to help prevent another. Aspirin guidelines for the primary prevention of heart attacks vary. Don't start taking daily aspirin before talking with your healthcare team about the risks and benefits.

From Mayo Clinic to your inbox

Sign up for free and stay up to date on research advancements, health tips, current health topics, and expertise on managing health. Click here for an email preview.

To provide you with the most relevant and helpful information, and understand which information is beneficial, we may combine your email and website usage information with other information we have about you. If you are a Mayo Clinic patient, this could include protected health information. If we combine this information with your protected health information, we will treat all of that information as protected health information and will only use or disclose that information as set forth in our notice of privacy practices. You may opt-out of email communications at any time by clicking on the unsubscribe link in the e-mail.

Oct. 25, 2024 See more In-depth

See also

  1. Health foods
  2. Angina
  3. Atkins Diet
  4. Automated external defibrillators: Do you need an AED?
  5. Blood Basics
  6. Blood tests for heart disease
  7. Bradycardia
  8. Transplant advances
  9. Butter vs. margarine
  10. Calcium supplements: A risk factor for heart attack?
  11. Can vitamins help prevent a heart attack?
  12. Cardiac ablation
  13. Cardiac amyloidosis — Treatment options
  14. Cardiac amyloidosis — What is amyloid and how does it affect the heart
  15. Cardiac catheterization
  16. Cardioversion
  17. Chelation therapy for heart disease: Does it work?
  18. Chest X-rays
  19. Complete blood count (CBC)
  20. Coronary angiogram
  21. Coronary angioplasty and stents
  22. Coronary artery bypass surgery
  23. Coronary artery spasm: Cause for concern?
  24. Cough
  25. CT scan
  26. Daily aspirin therapy
  27. Dizziness
  28. Don't get tricked by these 3 heart-health myths
  29. Echocardiogram
  30. Ejection fraction: What does it measure?
  31. Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG)
  32. Heart transplant to treat dilated cardiomyopathy: Elmo's story
  33. Erectile dysfunction: A sign of heart disease?
  34. Exercise and chronic disease
  35. Fasting diet: Can it improve my heart health?
  36. Fatigue
  37. Flu Shot Prevents Heart Attack
  38. Flu shots and heart disease
  39. Grass-fed beef
  40. Healthy Heart for Life!
  41. Heart and Blood Health
  42. Heart arrhythmia
  43. Heart attack
  44. Heart attack prevention: Should I avoid secondhand smoke?
  45. Heart attack symptoms
  46. Heart Attack Timing
  47. Heart disease
  48. Heart-healthy diet: 8 steps to prevent heart disease
  49. Heart murmurs
  50. Heart Rhythm Conditions
  51. Heart transplant
  52. Herbal supplements and heart drugs
  53. Holter monitor
  54. Honey: An effective cough remedy?
  55. Implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs)
  56. Leg swelling
  57. Mediterranean diet
  58. Menus for heart-healthy eating
  59. NSAIDs: Do they increase my risk of heart attack and stroke?
  60. Nuclear stress test
  61. Numbness
  62. Nuts and your heart: Eating nuts for heart health
  63. Omega-3 in fish
  64. Omega-6 fatty acids
  65. Organ transplant in highly sensitized patients
  66. Pacemaker
  67. Pericardial effusion
  68. Polypill: Does it treat heart disease?
  69. Pseudoaneurysm: What causes it?
  70. Pulmonary edema
  71. Red wine, antioxidants and resveratrol
  72. Shortness of breath
  73. Silent heart attack
  74. Sitting risks: How harmful is too much sitting?
  75. Statins
  76. Heart disease prevention
  77. Stress symptoms
  78. Stress test
  79. Tachycardia
  80. The Last Brother's Heart
  81. Integrative approaches to treating pain
  82. Nutrition and pain
  83. Pain rehabilitation
  84. Self-care approaches to treating pain
  85. Trans fat
  86. Triathlete transplant
  87. Coronary angioplasty
  88. Video: Heart and circulatory system