An analysis of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans of ageing hearts of nearly 3,000 adults showed significant differences in the way male and female hearts change over time, researchers said.
Results of the study, led by investigators at Johns Hopkins University, do not explain exactly what causes the sex-based differences but they may shed light on different forms of heart failure seen in men and women that may require the development of gender-specific treatments.
In both sexes, the main heart chamber, the left ventricle - which fills with and then forces out blood - gets smaller with time. As a result, less blood enters the heart and less gets pumped out to the rest of the body.
But in men, the study found, the heart muscle that encircles the chamber grows bigger and thicker with age, while in women, it retains its size or gets somewhat smaller.
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"Thicker heart muscle and smaller heart chamber volume both portend heightened risk of age-related heart failure but the gender variations we observed mean men and women may develop the disease for different reasons," said lead investigator John Eng, associate professor of radiological science at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
But the finding that in women, the heart muscle tends to shrink or remain the same size means they may not derive the same benefit from such treatments, researchers said.
For the study, researchers analysed MRI scans performed on nearly 3,000 older adults, ages 54 to 94, without preexisting heart disease.
Participants were followed between 2002 and 2012, at six hospitals across the US where each one of them underwent MRI testing at the beginning of the study and once more after a decade.
Over a period of 10 years, the weight of the heart's main pumping chamber - the left ventricle - increased by an average of 8 grams in men and decreased by 1.6 grams in women.
The heart's filling capacity - marked by the amount of blood the left ventricle can hold between heartbeats - declined in both sexes but more so in women, by about 13 millilitres, compared with just under 10 millilitres in men.