Affiliation:
1. Kazan State Medical University
2. City clinical hospital №7 named after M.N. Sadykov
3. Kazan (Volga Region) Federal University
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases remain a common cause of morbidity and mortality in populations around the world, varying in incidence by age and gender. Every year, more than 7 million people around the world are diagnosed with acute coronary syndrome, which may be the first clinical manifestation of coronary heart disease. In the ranking of mortality causes in the Russian Federation, diseases of the circulatory system occupy a leading place. The purpose of the review was to analyze the clinical characteristics and spectrum of coronary lesions of patients with acute coronary syndrome depending on age and gender. Thus, according to the results of coronary angiography, young patients with myocardial infarction were rarely accompanied by multivessel or ostial lesions of the coronary arteries, in contrast to the elderly patients. It was revealed that multivessel lesions of the coronary arteries more often characterize males, and singlevessel lesions more often characterize females. It is obvious that the prognosis of patients with acute coronary syndrome will largely depend not only on age and gender, but also on the outcome of the syndrome, the quality and scope of diagnostic and treatment procedures. This is especially important since most patients under 60 years of age are exposed to some form of systematic work load in their field of activity. The influence of polypathy, characteristic of modern cardiac patients, can be expressed to varying degrees depending on the gender and age of the patient with acute coronary syndrome. The article presents data on the short-term and long-term prognosis of patients with acute coronary syndrome, taking into account gender and age periods, including depending on the tactics of their management. Determining the clinical characteristics of patients of different ages allows to take them into account for selecting effective and safe therapy, preventing wave-like atherosclerosis as the main cause of coronary heart disease, thereby improving prognosis and survival.