Many of the risk factors for heart disease are related to lifestyle
and environmental factors and are typically labeled uncontrollable
(non-modifiable) or controllable (modifiable). These can be conditions,
personal traits and lifestyles that contribute to atherosclerosis
(hardening of the arteries), which causes coronary artery disease.
The
seriousness of this disease can be seen in the fact that over 40% of
all people in the United States who suffer a heart attack will die from
its affects.
Heart disease, which is a term that includes several
more specific heart conditions, is the leading cause of death in the
United States and is a major cause of disability. The major forms of
this most deadly of diseases include acute rheumatic fever, chronic
rheumatic heart disease, hypertensive heart disease, coronary heart
disease, pulmonary heart disease, congestive heart failure and any other
heart condition or disease.
It is, in simplistic terms, the
inability of the heart to pump or receive adequate amounts of blood due
to atherosclerosis or damage to the heart caused by infection or
congenital defects. In fact heart disease and stroke both have the same
risk factors and causes.
An estimated 25% of all Americans have
one or more risk factors for heart disease, increasing their risk for
heart attack. Most risk factors are related to lifestyle while other
risk factors that cannot be changed include age, gender, and genetics.
Health
behaviors associated with a high risk of heart disease include being
physically inactive, eating a diet high in salt and saturated fat, and
smoking tobacco. While you can't control your age, gender, race, or
family history, you can decrease your chances of developing heart
disease by focusing on the lifestyle changes you can make to improve
your overall health.
Leading a healthy lifestyle and following
medical advice to reduce or remove risk factors is the best way to
reduce the risk of developing heart disease. Although heart disease
takes on different specific forms, there are a common core of risk
factors that influence whether someone will ultimately be at risk for
heart disease or not.
There are many factors that can increase
your risk of getting heart disease. Some of these factors are out of
your control but most of them can be avoided by choosing to live a
healthy lifestyle. Excess body fat is one of the greatest risk factors
for heart disease. Cholesterol levels are determined by a combination
of age, gender, heredity, and dietary choices, and of these four
factors, changing your diet to a healthier one is something you can do
something about. High blood pressure combined with other risk factors
such as being physically inactive, eating a diet high in salt and
saturated fat, and smoking tobacco greatly increases your chances of
getting heart disease as well. In some cases other factors such as
stress and drinking too much alcohol have been linked to cardiovascular
disease.
I'm actually a student of medical sciences and I'm currently doing this research on coronary diseases. I've checked out some other blog posts as well and I've also bought this book for heart disease prevention. Yesterday I watched some tutorials on YouTube about what one should do if he's having a heart attack but honestly I think your article is the most informative I've read up till now. Thanks a lot.
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