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'Underdiagnosed' variety of heart attack striking new moms

After the birth of her third child, Nadia Lappa, 37, marvelled at how easily she was recovering until she suffered an unusual type of heart attack while visiting coworkers with her infant son.

Ottawa Heart Institute taking part in nationwide study of spontaneous coronary artery dissection, or SCAD

In April 2016 Nadia Lappa, seen here with her son Nicholas, suffered a SCAD heart attack. The condition, which primarily affects women, occurs when artery walls tear. (Judy Trinh/CBC)

After the birth of her third child, Nadia Lappa,37,marvelled at how easily she was recoveringcompared to her previous pregnanciesuntilshe suffered an unusual type of heart attackwhile visiting her co-workers at the office with her newborn son, Nicholas.

"It started out as a regular day. I went for lunch with my friends and visited my colleagues. I was a proud mom and I wanted to show off my baby at work," saidLappa.

In April, thecivil engineerwas signing in at the front desk of the Transport Canada building on Sparks Street,her seven-week-old son beside her in the stroller,when she wassuddenly hitwith anoverwhelming sense of anxiety. Pressure started building up in her chest to the point where she says it felt like an elephantwas sitting on her. Her arms began to grow numb.

If something happens to me who will be here to raise the kids? The baby was just seven weeks old!-NadiaLappa, SCAD heart attack patient

Despite becomingnauseous and violently ill, Lappa tried to downplay the situation as a possible allergicreaction to her lunch, or mastitis from breastfeeding. But her colleagues, alarmed by her ashenappearance, dialled 911.

With sirens blaring the ambulance rushed her to theOttawa Heart Institute where shewas immediatelyrolled into the catheterizationlab for an angiogram.

The x-ray revealed that Lappa was suffering from a spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) atype of heart attack that occurswhen artery wallstear, preventing blood from getting to the heart. Cardiologistssay it's an underdiagnosedtype of heart attack that primarily affects a very small group of women.
Dr. Chris Glover of the Ottawa Heart Institute says four per cent of the heart attack patients he sees are women who have suffered SCAD. (CBC News)

In the operating roomLappawas toldone major artery had collapsed and a second smaller artery was torn. She immediately underwent an angioplastyand three stentswere placedin her arteriesto restore blood flow to her heart.

Apart from the physical damage, Lappa says the experience forced her to contemplate her own mortality much sooner than she everanticipated.

"When you have a baby you're looking forward to the future and hopeful for the child, you don't think about you. You don't worry about, how am I inside? Am I going to make it? If something happens to me who will be here to raise the kids? The baby was just seven weeks old."

SCAD strikes younger women, new mothers

SCAD accounts for roughly four per centof all heart attacks that are treated in hospital, but it overwhelmingly affects women.It also tends to strike younger victims the average age of a SCAD patient is 50, whereas the typical heart attack patient is a 65-year-old male.

But perhaps SCAD'smost devastating statistic is that itstrikes hardest in women who have recently given birth.

"Patients withperipartumSCAD have a larger degree of heart attack in larger parts of the vessels," says Dr. Jacqueline Saw, the country's leading expert in spontaneous coronary artery dissection. The University of British Columbia researchersays thehigher levels ofhormones such as estrogen and progesterone released during pregnancy,combined with theintense physical and psychological stress of labour, can weaken artery walls.

Women are also advised against getting pregnant if they've had a previous SCAD attack because there is strong likelihood of them getting a future tear.

Saw's research also shows a correlationbetween SCAD andfibromuscular dysplasia (FMD),abnormal cell growth on the walls of medium and large arteries. FMD also primarily affects women.

Sawsays much more research is needed and that's why she's spearheadinga long-term nationwide study of SCAD patients. So far only 350 patientsare enrolled in the study, but researchers are looking to sign up more.

Ottawa Heart Institute in SCAD study

Dr. Chris Glover of the Ottawa Heart Institutesays the hospital is registeringmore cases of SCADbecause staff there havegotten better at identifying arterial tears, and because angiograms are now being conducted on all heart attack patients.

"Weare starting to recognize when the anatomy doesn't fit the garden variety heart attacks."

Glover says it is now routine to look for SCAD when a woman under the age of 50 goes into cardiac arrest. The Ottawa Heart Institute is one of 22 hospitals tracking patientsin theCanada-wide study.

Among the patients signed up to participate in the study is NadiaLappa. Doctors will monitor her health closely over the next few years.She will have to undergo regularultrasounds,angiogramsand CAT scans. Researchers will meticulously track her medication, and observe how long it takes her to circle the hospital's indoor track.

These days she's not moving very quickly,but three months after her heart attackLappahas a new-found appreciation for life in the slow lane.

Nadia Lappa with her family: husband Robert holding baby Nicholas, Sebastian, 8 and Olivia, 3. (Supplied)

"I was an A-type personality and I would create projects for myself because I wanted to feel busy, but now that I'm having to convalesce, I'm enjoying the finer things like walking around the block with my kids and my dogs."

Lappa nolonger takesher health for granted, and says she will never again minimizeany sickness or pain she feels.

"We have tobe willing to have things get checked out.Let the hospital send you home and tell you it's nothing, but go if you think something's off."

Contact Judy Trinh@JudyTrinhCBC or at judy.trinh@cbc.ca