Bypassing women.In comparison to men, women have it good when it comes to heart disease -- they have less of it. But when it comes to treating coronary atherosclerosis atherosclerosis (ăth'ərōsklərō`sĭs): see arteriosclerosis. atherosclerosis or hardening of the arteries , they have it bad -- more women die during bypass surgery Bypass surgery A surgical procedure that grafts blood vessels onto arteries to reroute the blood flow around blockages in the arteries (arteriosclerosis). , a common treatment for severe atherosclerosis, than men. Delos M. cosgrove and his colleagues at the Cleveland Clinic Cleveland Clinic (formally known as the Cleveland Clinic Foundation) is a multispecialty academic medical center located in Cleveland, Ohio, USA. Cleveland Clinic was established in 1921 by four physicians for the purpose of providing patient care, research, and medical think the problem is that women are generally smaller than men. Of 7,105 patients who had bypass surgery at the Cleveland Clinic between 1980 and 1982, 0.5 percent of the men died, compared with 1.7 percent of the women. Eight other studies have found a combined mortality rate of 1.7 percent for men and 4 percent for women, he says. Analyzing 4,452 patients, Cosgrove found the key factor was body surface area. "It's not sex that's a problem," he says. "It's size." A small man would have the same prognosis as a small woman when compared with a larger man or woman. One factor may be the vessel used for grafting grafting, horticultural practice of uniting parts of two plants so that they grow as one. The scion, or cion, the part grafted onto the stock or rooted part, may be a single bud, as in budding, or a cutting that has several buds. , Cosgrove suggests. While the bypass procedure as originally designed used a large vein from the leg, many surgeons now believe an artery from the chest makes a better graft graft, in surgery: see transplantation, medical. graft In horticulture, the act of placing a portion of one plant (called a bud or scion) into or on a stem, root, or branch of another (called the stock) in such a way that a union forms and the . But the artery is smaller than the vein, making the procedure more difficult, especially in smaller individuals, Cosgrove says. |
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