What Increases Your Risk
Coronary artery disease (CAD) is the major cause of
heart attacks. So the more risk factors you have for
CAD, the greater your risk for developing
unstable angina or having a heart attack. Smoking,
diabetes,
high cholesterol,
high blood pressure, and a
family history of early CAD are all strong risk
factors for coronary artery disease. For more information, see the What
Increases Your Risk section of the topic
Coronary Artery Disease.
Use the
heart attack risk calculator
to estimate your risk of having a heart attack
over 10 years. This tool is designed to estimate risk in adults age 20 and
older who do not have heart disease or diabetes.
Even if you
already have coronary artery disease or have had a heart attack, you can still
lower your risk of another heart attack. To lower your risk:
- Stop smoking. Quitting smoking is probably the most important step to
decrease your chance of a heart attack. Avoid secondhand smoke too.
- Reduce high cholesterol. High cholesterol can lead to
a buildup of cholesterol inside your arteries.
- Lower high blood pressure. High blood pressure damages
the coronary arteries and increases the heart's workload.
- Manage diabetes. People who have diabetes develop
hardening and narrowing of the arteries more frequently and at a younger age
than those not affected by diabetes.
- Stay at a healthy weight. Weight loss frequently
improves blood pressure and cholesterol levels and may also help control
diabetes.
- Be physically active. Regular exercise can help reduce
your risk of heart attack by helping you to control cholesterol and blood
pressure, regulate blood sugar (important for people with diabetes), and lose
weight. Try to do activities that raise your
heart rate. Aim for at least 2½ hours of
moderate exercise a week.1
One way to do this is to be active 30 minutes a day, at least 5 days a week.
It's fine to be active in blocks of 10 minutes or more throughout your day and
week.
- Manage depression and emotions. Treating depression
and treating anger problems are important steps in improving cardiac and
overall health and quality of life.
- Reduce stress. Stress causes increased blood pressure and heart
rate and causes your arteries to narrow, increasing your risk for heart
attack.
- Evaluate birth control pill and hormone replacement therapy use. Birth control pills are more likely to increase a woman's risk if
she is older than 35 and smokes cigarettes. Hormone therapy (estrogen with or without
progestin) may increase the risk for heart disease.
This risk is higher for some women than others.
- Take an
aspirin every day (check with your doctor first to
make sure you have no medical reasons for not taking it).
- Avoid getting sick from the
flu. Get a flu shot every year.
- Take all of your medicines correctly. Taking medicine can lower
your risk of having another heart attack or dying from coronary artery
disease.
Some risk factors are beyond your control. These include:
Elevated levels of
C-reactive protein (CRP), a substance found in blood
that indicates
inflammation, may better predict your risk for having
a heart attack than cholesterol levels. Testing for CRP levels may help predict
heart attack risk even when a person has a normal or low level of LDL
cholesterol. And decreasing CRP levels, by taking a
statin, may lower the risk of a heart attack in people
who have normal cholesterol levels but have high CRP levels.2
Most
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), which
are used to relieve pain and fever and reduce swelling and inflammation, may
increase the risk of heart attack. This risk is greater if you take NSAIDs at
higher doses or for long periods of time. People who are older than 65 or who
have existing heart, stomach, or intestinal disease are more likely to have
problems.
Aspirin, unlike other NSAIDs, has been shown to reduce
the risk of heart attack and stroke. But it also carries the risks of serious
stomach and intestinal bleeding as well as skin reactions. Regular use of other
NSAIDs, such as ibuprofen, may make aspirin less effective in preventing heart
attack and stroke.