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The Overlooked Valve: Why Women With Aortic Stenosis Fall Through the Cracks

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  • Overview

    In this video brief, Dr. Pam Taub explores disparities in the diagnosis and treatment of aortic stenosis (AS) among women. She highlights that nearly half of women with symptomatic severe AS are underdiagnosed or not referred promptly, often due to symptoms being misattributed to noncardiac causes. Dr. Taub discusses sex-based anatomical and physiological differences that contribute to delayed detection and undertreatment, such as smaller annulus size, increased valve fibrosis, and lower murmur intensity. Clearly, more personalized approaches are needed that account for these differences. The episode concludes with a call to action for clinicians to adopt vigilant, equitable practices in evaluating and managing AS in women.

  • Provider(s)/Educational Partner(s)


    Our ultimate goal is to improve the care being delivered to patients, and our high-quality, evidence-based CME initiatives reflect our dedication to the creation and execution of excellence and are the product of shared research, knowledge, and clinical practice skills across the healthcare continuum.

  • Commercial Support

    This activity is supported by an independent educational grant from Medtronic. 

Recommended
Details
Presenters
Related
  • Overview

    In this video brief, Dr. Pam Taub explores disparities in the diagnosis and treatment of aortic stenosis (AS) among women. She highlights that nearly half of women with symptomatic severe AS are underdiagnosed or not referred promptly, often due to symptoms being misattributed to noncardiac causes. Dr. Taub discusses sex-based anatomical and physiological differences that contribute to delayed detection and undertreatment, such as smaller annulus size, increased valve fibrosis, and lower murmur intensity. Clearly, more personalized approaches are needed that account for these differences. The episode concludes with a call to action for clinicians to adopt vigilant, equitable practices in evaluating and managing AS in women.

  • Provider(s)/Educational Partner(s)


    Our ultimate goal is to improve the care being delivered to patients, and our high-quality, evidence-based CME initiatives reflect our dedication to the creation and execution of excellence and are the product of shared research, knowledge, and clinical practice skills across the healthcare continuum.

  • Commercial Support

    This activity is supported by an independent educational grant from Medtronic. 

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