Left Navigation - Women’s Heart Center
Women’s Heart Center
Heart disease is the leading cause of death for women in the U.S., yet its symptoms often go unrecognized.
The Women's Heart Center at Stony Brook Heart Institute offers a comprehensive program to address the specific cardiac needs of women. From prevention to treatment, we provide individualized care delivered by a team of female cardiologists who understand your unique health journey.
Conditions Treated
Many women don't realize that heart disease symptoms can differ significantly from those in men, which can lead to delayed treatment. Our Center focuses on the distinct cardiac issues women face, including:
- Gender-specific heart disease symptoms
- Cardiac health during and after pregnancy
- The impact of hormonal changes on the heart
- Cardiovascular effects of conditions like lupus and rheumatoid arthritis
- Pulmonary hypertension
Women’s Heart Center Services
Our goal is to empower you with the knowledge and tools to protect your heart health.
- Risk assessment and prevention: We evaluate your individual risk factors and help you manage them through lifestyle changes and, when needed, medication.
- Comprehensive cardiac evaluation: Following a thorough review of your medical history and an initial exam, we use advanced diagnostic tests to create the best treatment plan for you.
- Pregnancy and heart health: Our team provides expert guidance to manage your heart condition safely before, during and after pregnancy.
- Lifestyle management: We provide education and support for weight management, diet modification, smoking cessation and exercise to reduce your cardiac risk.
- Cardiac rehabilitation referrals: For those recovering from a cardiac event or procedure, we can provide a referral to a specialized rehabilitation program.
Our Team
Our staff is composed entirely of women with years of practicing in both general and specialized cardiology. We take a collaborative approach, emphasizing education and prevention.
Our team is not only dedicated to providing outstanding clinical care but is also involved in vital research focused on women's heart disease — ensuring you benefit from the latest medical insights. We are committed to creating a comfortable and supportive environment where you feel heard and understood.
Frequently Asked Questions
Heart disease is the number-one killer of women, claiming more lives each year than any other disease, including breast cancer. Despite this, it is often mistakenly seen as a condition that primarily affects men.
The most common heart attack symptom in women is some type of pain, pressure or discomfort in the chest. However, the pain is not always severe or characterized as a pain. Pain may not be the most prominent symptom, rather shortness of breath, indigestion, palpitations, neck, shoulder, jaw, or back pain. Associated symptoms may be unusual nausea, vomiting, sweating, lightheadedness, or unusual fatigue.
Many women present to medical care well into a heart attack, after much heart damage has occurred, because their symptoms are not typical of a heart attack, or they did not think they were at risk. If you experience any symptoms or think you may be having a heart attack, call for emergency medical help. Do not drive yourself to the emergency room.
Traditional risk factors for coronary artery disease that affect both men and women are:
- High blood pressure (hypertension)
- High cholesterol (hypercholesterolemia)
- Diabetes
- Family history of heart disease
- Tobacco use
- Age
However, other factors such as the metabolic syndrome (a combination of abdominal fat, high blood pressure, high blood sugar, and high triglycerides) can affect women more than men. In addition, mental stress and depression can have a greater impact on women than on men.
The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute provides an online risk calculator that you can use for the most precise estimate of your own risk. It's called the Risk Assessment Tool for Estimating 10-year Risk of Developing Hard CHD (Myocardial Infarction and Coronary Death). Click here to use it.
The Reynolds Risk Score is another online option for calculating risk. It is designed to predict your risk of having a future heart attack, stroke, or other major heart disease in the next 10 years. In addition to your age, blood pressure, cholesterol levels and whether you currently smoke, the Reynolds Risk Score uses information from two other risk factors, a blood test called hsCRP (a measure of inflammation) and whether or not either of your parents had a heart attack before they reached age 60 (a measure of genetic risk). Click here to use this risk assessment calculator.
There are several lifestyle changes that women can make to reduce their risk of heart disease, including:
- Exercise 30–60 minutes of aerobic activity such as walking on most days of the week; women who need to lose weight or sustain weight loss should accumulate a minimum of 60–90 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity on most, and preferably all, days of the week
- Maintain a healthy weight=
- Quit or don't start smoking
- Eat a diet that is low in saturated fat, cholesterol, and salt
- Visit your doctor on a regular basis
- Have your blood pressure checked
- Have your cholesterol checked — blood pressure goal is less than 120/80 mmHg
- Medication is indicated if blood pressure is greater than 140/90, or greater than 130/80 in diabetics or patients with kidney disease
- Treat known risk factors for heart disease, with the advice of your doctor
- Some women benefit from a daily "baby" aspirin, but check with your doctor prior to starting any new medication
These are the things women can do to take good care of themselves and reduce their risk of heart disease.
No. Women under the age of 65 who have any risk factors for heart disease should pay close attention to their symptoms. Women of all ages should take their heart seriously. Click here to see list of risk factors.
It is uncertain whether taking any vitamins can help reduce your risk of having a heart attack or developing heart disease. Antioxidant vitamin supplements (for example, vitamin E, vitamin C, and beta carotene) should not be used for the prevention of heart disease in women. Folic acid, with or without B6 and B12 supplementation, should not be used for the prevention of heart disease in women.
The answer is simply this: you must consistently choose healthy eating patterns, and healthy food selections; that is:
- Fruits and vegetables
- Whole grains, high fiber
- Fish, especially oily fish, at least twice per week
- No more than one drink of alcohol per day
- Less than 2.3 grams of sodium per day
- Saturated fats less than 10% of calories, less than 300 mg cholesterol per day
- Limited trans fatty acid intake (main dietary sources are baked goods and fried foods made with partially hydrogenated vegetable oil)
These particular foods and eating patterns form a heart healthy diet.
You can find a lot of good options for heart healthy eating at the websites of the DASH Diet Eating Plan and the American Heart Association, which offer recipes, healthy cooking tips, secrets to heart-smart shopping, and more.
Women should maintain or lose weight through an appropriate balance of physical activity, calorie intake, and formal behavioral programs when indicated to maintain the goal of having a body mass index (BMI) between 18.5 and 24.9 kg/m² (click here for a BMI calculator) and waist circumference less than 35 inches.
Hormone therapy and selective estrogen-receptor modulators (SERMs) should not be used to prevent heart disease in women.
Secondhand smoke is a risk factor for having a heart attack. If you are regularly around smokers, encourage them to quit or go outdoors to smoke. This is especially important if you have had a heart attack or have been diagnosed with heart disease.
The answer depends on the problem and the woman's cardiac status. With some types of heart disease, outcomes are excellent without any special management in women with good function. With other types, pregnancy poses a reasonable risk, and still other types should rule out pregnancy altogether. We work together with high-risk obstetrics, midwives, and obstetricians on faculty and in the community. We care for the pregnant woman with cardiovascular disease through a multidisciplinary approach.