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Heart Care

Risk Factors & Prevention of Heart Disease

Increased age, high blood cholesterol, high blood pressure and smoking are a few of the risk factors related to heart disease, according to the American Heart Association.

You can modify, treat or control most risk factors to lower your risk by focusing on your lifestyle habits or, if needed, taking medicine.

According to the American Heart Association, the major risk factors for coronary heart disease are:

  • Increased age: four out of five people who die of coronary heart disease are age 65 or older.
  • Male gender: men have a greater risk of heart attach and they have attacks earlier in life.
  • Heredity: children of parents with heart disease are more likely to develop it themselves. Heart disease risk is also higher among Americans with ancestry from Africa or Mexico, native Americans, Hawaiians and Asians.
  • Tobacco smoke: smoker's risk of heart attack is more than twice that of nonsmokers. Second hand smoke increases the risk even for nonsmokers.
  • High blood cholesterol: risk increases as blood cholesterol levels increase.
  • High blood pressure: increases the heart's workload, causing the heart to enlarge and weaken over time.
  • Physical inactivity: regular, moderate-to-vigorous exercise is important in preventing heart and blood vessel disease.
  • Obesity and overweight: people with excess body fat are, especially in the waist area, are more likely to develop heart disease, even if they have no other risk factors.
  • Diabetes mellitus: even when glucose levels are under control, diabetes greatly increases the risk of heart disease and stroke.