The vast majority of women live full, active, and healthy lives well into old age. This page is not about fear — it is about understanding. The female cardiovascular system has its own remarkable physiology, its own hormonal story, and its own relationship with heart health across a lifetime. That is why women's cardiac health has become a dedicated and rapidly growing field of cardiology.
"I hope the resources on Heart Matters encourage you to start those conversations with your healthcare team and feel more empowered in your care. Knowledge is not alarm — it is confidence."
— Kathy Marinias RN, Associate Editor & Women's Health EditorThe Role of Oestrogen
For much of a woman's life, oestrogen acts as a natural cardiovascular protector — supporting healthy arteries, managing cholesterol, reducing inflammation and regulating blood pressure. This gives women a meaningful biological advantage in earlier life that is worth understanding.
Anatomical Differences
Women's hearts and coronary arteries are on average smaller than men's. The coronary microcirculation — the tiny vessels supplying the heart muscle — plays a proportionally greater role in women's cardiac health, which is one reason why some conditions present differently in women.
A Lifetime Perspective
Women's cardiovascular risk changes across life stages — reproductive years, pregnancy, perimenopause, and beyond. Understanding this arc is helpful for proactive, personalised heart health management at every age.
Women can and do experience classic chest pain — but they are more likely to present with symptoms that may not immediately suggest the heart. Being aware of this difference is simply useful information, not a reason for concern.
If something feels off and you are wondering whether it could be your heart, it is always reasonable to have it assessed. A simple ECG and blood test will usually provide clarity quickly. You are never overreacting by seeking an assessment.
Most cardiovascular risk factors are shared between men and women — but some carry a greater relative impact in women, and a few are unique to women's biology and life experience. Being aware of yours is a helpful starting point for a conversation with your doctor.
Preeclampsia
Associated with higher long-term risk of hypertension and heart disease. Worth mentioning to your cardiologist as part of your history.
Gestational Diabetes
Resolves post-delivery in most cases. Worth monitoring long-term as it carries some risk of progression to type 2 diabetes.
Early Menopause
Menopause before age 45 is associated with higher cardiovascular risk — making proactive monitoring particularly worthwhile.
Hormonal Contraception
Combined oral contraceptives can increase the risk of blood clots in some women — particularly relevant if you smoke or have other risk factors. Worth discussing with your GP.
Diabetes
Carries a proportionally greater cardiovascular impact in women than in men — making good glucose management particularly important.
Depression & Stress
More common in women and more strongly linked to cardiovascular outcomes. Mental and heart health are genuinely connected — not separate concerns.
PCOS
Polycystic ovary syndrome is associated with insulin resistance and metabolic changes that can increase cardiovascular risk over time.
Autoimmune Conditions
Conditions like rheumatoid arthritis and lupus — more common in women — are associated with elevated cardiovascular risk through chronic inflammation.
Smoking
One of the most powerful modifiable risk factors — and one that carries greater cardiovascular impact in women than in men.
High Blood Pressure
Puts extra strain on heart and arteries. Very manageable with lifestyle changes and medication — worth monitoring regularly.
High Cholesterol
Elevated LDL contributes to plaque build-up in arteries. A simple blood test and, where needed, effective treatment options are available.
Family History
A close relative with early heart disease is worth mentioning to your doctor — it helps shape a more personalised approach to your care.
Having one or more of these risk factors does not mean heart disease is inevitable — it simply means it is worth a conversation with your healthcare team. Many risk factors are very effectively managed with straightforward interventions, and knowing about them early is genuinely empowering.
Several cardiac conditions occur predominantly or exclusively in women. They are worth knowing about — not because they are common, but because recognising them early leads to much better outcomes.
A tear in a coronary artery wall — not caused by plaque — that can cause a heart attack. Most commonly affects women in their 40s and 50s, often with no conventional risk factors. Treatment differs from standard heart attack management, and outcomes with the right care are generally good.
Read the full article →A stress-triggered condition where the heart's main pumping chamber temporarily weakens. Affects postmenopausal women disproportionately. Most people recover fully — and with the right support, outcomes are very good.
Read the full article →Disease in the small coronary vessels, or spasm of the artery wall, can cause genuine chest pain even when a standard angiogram appears normal. More common in women and increasingly well-recognised. A dedicated article is coming.
Article coming soonSCAD is one of the more under-recognised cardiac conditions in women. This short video explains what it is, who it can affect, and how it is managed.
Pregnancy places significant demands on the cardiovascular system — and in doing so, can sometimes reveal things worth knowing for the future. A complete obstetric history is genuinely useful cardiovascular information.
During Pregnancy
Blood volume increases by up to 50% and cardiac output rises substantially. For most women this is completely normal — but it can sometimes highlight underlying factors worth monitoring.
Preeclampsia
Associated with higher long-term cardiovascular risk. Worth mentioning to your cardiologist — not to cause concern, but because it helps them give you more personalised care.
Peripartum Cardiomyopathy
A rare condition in which the heart muscle temporarily weakens around the time of delivery. Most women recover fully with appropriate treatment and follow-up.
Gestational Diabetes
Resolves after delivery in most cases. Ongoing monitoring is worthwhile, and a healthy lifestyle remains protective long-term.
The Long View
Share your obstetric history with your cardiologist. These are not just obstetric details — they are part of your cardiovascular story.
Including your pregnancy history — preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, peripartum cardiomyopathy — when you see a cardiologist helps them build a more complete picture of your individual risk. It takes moments and can make a real difference to the quality of your care.
Pregnancy is one of the most remarkable things the cardiovascular system does. What happens in those months can tell us things about long-term heart health that are genuinely useful to know.
— Kathy Marinias RNQuestions Worth Raising With Your Doctor
Oestrogen's protective role in cardiovascular health means the menopause transition is a natural point to think more proactively about heart health — not with alarm, but with awareness. It is a good time to talk to your doctor about your overall risk picture.
Oestrogen Protection
Oestrogen supports healthy arteries, manages cholesterol, and reduces inflammation. Cardiovascular risk is relatively lower during these years.
The Transition
Oestrogen levels fluctuate and decline. Blood pressure and cholesterol may change. A useful time to review cardiovascular risk with your doctor.
Staying Proactive
Cardiovascular risk rises. Proactive management of blood pressure, cholesterol and lifestyle remains highly effective at any age.
An Evolving Conversation
HRT initiated early in menopause may be beneficial for some women. An evolving area — worth a personalised discussion with your doctor.
If you are in or approaching menopause, asking your GP or cardiologist for a cardiovascular risk assessment is a straightforward and proactive step. It is simply good preventive care — and many women find it reassuring.
The relationship between psychological wellbeing and heart health is not metaphorical — it is physiological. Depression, anxiety and chronic stress are more prevalent in women and carry a meaningful relationship with cardiovascular health. This is not about blame — it is about understanding the whole picture.
Depression is recognised as an independent cardiovascular risk factor. In women, this relationship is particularly meaningful. Addressing mental health is part of a holistic approach to heart health — not a separate concern.
Chronic psychological stress activates pathways that raise blood pressure and promote inflammation over time. If you are managing significant life stress, it is worth mentioning to your healthcare team as part of the broader picture.
If you are managing depression, anxiety or significant stress alongside cardiovascular risk factors, sharing this with your cardiologist helps them support you more completely. These are not separate conversations.
When in Doubt, Get Checked Out
If you experience chest discomfort, breathlessness, unusual fatigue, jaw pain, nausea, or any symptom that gives you pause — it is always reasonable to have it assessed. You are never overreacting. Women's cardiac symptoms can be more variable, and a simple check will either provide reassurance or catch something early. Both are good outcomes.
Heart Matters exists to help you feel informed and confident — not anxious. These resources are designed to support conversations with your healthcare team, not to replace them.
Heart Health Risk Factor Checklist
A simple self-assessment covering key cardiovascular risk factors — including those particularly relevant to women. Useful to bring to your next appointment.
Download free 🫀 Patient GuideWhen to Seek Medical Attention
Guidance on symptoms worth checking, and how to describe them clearly to your doctor or emergency services — simply and without alarm.
Read the guide 🔬 Special TopicThe Calcium Score
A coronary calcium scan can give a clearer picture of cardiovascular risk — particularly useful for postmenopausal women who want to understand their heart health better.
Learn moreQuestions Worth Raising at Your Next Appointment
Given my age and stage of life, what is my current cardiovascular risk?
I had complications during pregnancy — how should this inform my long-term care?
My symptoms are not classic — could they still be worth investigating?
What are the cardiovascular considerations around HRT for me specifically?
Are there any investigations appropriate for my risk profile?
How does my mental health factor into my overall cardiovascular picture?
The content on heartmatters.com is for general educational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice. Always consult your doctor or a qualified healthcare professional about any medical concerns. Heart Matters and its contributors are not responsible for decisions made based on this content.