Thanks to new technology, researchers at the Clinical Physiology group, Department of Molecular Medicine and Surgery, Karolinska Institutet, have demonstrated that females have higher myocardial perfusion, blood volume and extracellular volume in the heart compared to males. These findings were recently published in the journal Scientific Reports.
A newly developed technique allows for quantitative perfusion imaging of the heart using magnetic resonance.
“Healthy volunteers underwent perfusion imaging during pharmacological stress in order to investigate the heart’s perfusion,” says Jannike Nickander, from the group Clinical Physiology.
The study shows that women have higher perfusion, blood volume and extracellular volume compared to men during pharmacological stress, and that sex is an independent contributor to both extracellular volume and perfusion beyond other measurements such as blood composition or the size of the heart.
Sex differences in the physiology of the heart
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