Coronary Artery Disease

What Increases Your Risk

Things that can increase your risk for coronary artery disease are called risk factors. Some risk factors, such as your gender, your age, and your family history, can't be changed. Other risk factors for heart disease are tied to your lifestyle and habits. These often are things you can change. Your chance of getting coronary artery disease rises with the number of risk factors you have.

Risk factors you may be able to change include:

Smoking, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, and lack of exercise are risk factors you can reduce with lifestyle changes and medicine. Diabetes and obesity can sometimes be prevented when lifestyle changes are made early in life. To learn more, see the Prevention section of this topic.

Risk factors that you can't change include:

  • Family history. You're more at risk if one or more of your close relatives have or had early CAD.
  • Being male. Men generally develop heart disease 10 years earlier than women do. But women who have diabetes may develop heart disease at a younger age. By age 60, heart disease is one of the leading causes of death in both sexes.
  • Age. People over 65 are more likely to have heart disease.

What's your risk?

Your doctor can check your risk for heart disease using screening guidelines from the American Heart Association. The guidelines include all of the things that can place you at higher risk for disease.

See the Interactive Tool: Are You at Risk for a Heart Attack? Click here to see an interactive tool. to calculate your risk of having a heart attack in the next 10 years. The tool is based on a calculator created by the National Cholesterol Education Program. It's for adults age 20 and older who do not have heart disease or diabetes.

Metabolic syndrome can also increase your risk for heart disease.4 People with metabolic syndrome have a group of health problems related to their metabolism, including too much fat around the waist, high triglycerides, high blood pressure, high fasting blood sugar, and low HDL cholesterol.


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Author: Robin Parks, MS Last Updated: May 29, 2008
Medical Review: Caroline S. Rhoads, MD - Internal Medicine
Robert A. Kloner, MD, PhD - Cardiology
Ruth Schneider, MPH, RD - Diet and Nutrition

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Topic Contents
 Overview
 Health Tools Click here to view Health Tools.
 FAQs
 Cause
 Symptoms
Arrow PointerWhat Increases Your Risk
 When to Call a Doctor
 Exams and Tests
 Treatment Overview
 Prevention
 What Happens
 Living With Heart Disease
 Medications
 Surgery
 Angioplasty and Other Treatment
 End-of-Life Decisions
 References
 Credits