Heart Disease Guide

Important Heart Disease Facts & Resources

Heart Disease Information

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Heart disease and stroke are mainly consequences of atherosclerosis and high blood pressure (hypertension). Heart disease is sometimes included in the broader category of atherosclerotic and hypertensive diseases. Risk factors for heart disease and stroke have been well established for many years. Distinct from age, family history, and possible genetic determinants are modifiable risk factors that cause heart attacks and strokes, including high blood cholesterol, high blood pressure, smoking, and diabetes. Behaviors that contribute to development of risk factors for heart disease, partly by causing obesity, include adverse dietary patterns and physical inactivity.

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Social and environmental conditions that may determine such behavioral patterns, in turn, include education and income, cultural influences, family and personal habits, and opportunities to make favorable choices.For example, dietary patterns result from the influences of food production policies, marketing practices, product availability, cost, convenience, knowledge, choices that affect health, and preferences that are often based on early-life habits. Because many aspects of behavior are clearly beyond the control of the individual, the scope of heart disease and Stroke and stroke prevention, from the public health perspective, extends far beyond the individual or the patient. Thus, a comprehensive public health strategy for heart disease prevention must address the broader determinants of risk and disease burden as they affect both the population as a whole and particular groups of special concern, including those determinants that make healthier choices more likely for defeating heart disease.

Get your zzzzz's - now! - lack of sleep increases heart disease risk - Brief Article

Too little sleep can lead to coronary heart disease, says a recent study by Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. Women who averaged five hours or less of sleep a night were 39 percent more likely to develop coronary heart disease--the number one killer among African-Americans--than women who got eight hours of sleep. Those who slept six hours had an 18-percent higher risk of developing coronary heart disease, which, according to the American Heart Association, kills more than 50,000 Blacks each year.


Author: Essence
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Health Info Advocate for Heart Disease Information

Scott Parat has compiled and placed these pages on the web for the benefit of anyone suffering from heart disease. Scott has been involved in the health field for the last 20 years and focuses much of his attention toward natural solutions to health problems.

Heart Attack Symtoms

The National Heart Attack Alert Program notes these major signs of a heart attack: Chest discomfort. Most heart attacks involve discomfort in the center of the chest that lasts for more than a few minutes, or goes away and comes back. The discomfort can feel like uncomfortable pressure, squeezing, fullness, or pain.

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Discomfort in other areas of the upper body. Can include pain or discomfort in one or both arms, the back, neck, jaw, or stomach.

  • Does cholesterol affect heart disease risk in older patients?

    Several studies have shown that high levels of total cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol increase a middle-aged man's risk for coronary heart disease (CHD). However, similar findings have been less consistent in older patients. Curb and associates examined the relationship between cholesterol levels and cardiovascular disease in older men.

    The long-term, prospective study included healthy Japanese-American men 45 to 68 years of age. Exclusion criteria were a history of CHD and use of lipid-lowering medications. The authors noted baseline risk factors (e.g., body ...
    Author: American Family Physician
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  • A change of heart; how the Framingham heart study helped unravel the mysteries of cardiovascular disease
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    Author: SciTech Book News
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