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Sex Matters: A Comprehensive Comparison of Female and Male Hearts

  • Sarah R. St. Pierre
  • , Mathias Peirlinck
  • , Ellen Kuhl*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Stanford University

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articleAcademicpeer-review

164 Citations (Scopus)
100 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Cardiovascular disease in women remains under-diagnosed and under-treated. Recent studies suggest that this is caused, at least in part, by the lack of sex-specific diagnostic criteria. While it is widely recognized that the female heart is smaller than the male heart, it has long been ignored that it also has a different microstructural architecture. This has severe implications on a multitude of cardiac parameters. Here, we systematically review and compare geometric, functional, and structural parameters of female and male hearts, both in the healthy population and in athletes. Our study finds that, compared to the male heart, the female heart has a larger ejection fraction and beats at a faster rate but generates a smaller cardiac output. It has a lower blood pressure but produces universally larger contractile strains. Critically, allometric scaling, e.g., by lean body mass, reduces but does not completely eliminate the sex differences between female and male hearts. Our results suggest that the sex differences in cardiac form and function are too complex to be ignored: the female heart is not just a small version of the male heart. When using similar diagnostic criteria for female and male hearts, cardiac disease in women is frequently overlooked by routine exams, and it is diagnosed later and with more severe symptoms than in men. Clearly, there is an urgent need to better understand the female heart and design sex-specific diagnostic criteria that will allow us to diagnose cardiac disease in women equally as early, robustly, and reliably as in men. Systematic Review Registration: https://livingmatter.stanford.edu/.

Original languageEnglish
Article number831179
JournalFrontiers in Physiology
Volume13
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 22 Mar 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This research was part of the Digital Athlete Project within the Wu Tsai Human Performance Alliance. It is inspired by the Dassault Systèmes Living Heart Project and supported by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship to SS, by a Belgian American Education Foundation Research Fellowship to MP, and by the NIH grant 5R01HL131823 to EK.

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2022 St. Pierre, Peirlinck and Kuhl.

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

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