How
to Keep Your Heart Healthy
Every
year, more than 1 million people have heart attacks, according
to the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI).
About 13 million Americans have coronary heart disease, and
about half a million people die from it each year.
What's
Your Risk Profile?
Risk
factors for heart disease are typically labeled "uncontrollable"
or "controllable." The main uncontrollable risk
factors are age, gender, and a family history of heart disease,
especially at an early age.
The risk
of heart disease rises as people age, and men tend to develop
it earlier. Specifically, men ages 45 and older are at increased
risk of heart disease, while women 55 and older are at increased
risk. A woman's natural hormones give some level of protection
from heart disease before menopause.
"Heart
disease presents in women an average of seven to 10 years
later than in men," says Patrice Desvigne-Nickens, M.D.,
leader of cardiovascular medicine at the National Heart, Lung,
and Blood Institute (NHLBI). "But after menopause, women
develop heart disease as often as men, and women who have
a heart attack don't fare as well as men." Women are
more likely than men to die from a heart attack.
Though
heart disease is the leading cause of death for both men and
women in this country, surveys have shown that many women
don't know it, and that they are more worried about cancer,
especially breast cancer. "We want women to know that
heart disease is not a man's disease. Rather, heart disease
is the leading cause of death for women, and heart disease
is preventable and treatable," says Desvigne-Nickens.
The NHLBI
defines having a family history of early heart disease this
way: A father or brother who had heart disease before 55,
or a mother or sister who had heart disease before 65. Be
sure to tell your doctor if any of your family members have
had heart disease. Andre says it was only after he had a heart
attack that he learned that he had four uncles who had been
diagnosed with coronary artery disease.
Even
if you have uncontrollable risk factors for heart disease,
it doesn't mean that you can't take steps to limit your risk.
Researchers say that controllable risk factors--physical inactivity,
smoking, overweight or obesity, high blood pressure, high
blood cholesterol, and diabetes--are all major influences
on the development and severity of heart disease.
According
to Cynthia Tracy, M.D., chief of cardiology at Georgetown
University Hospital in Washington, D.C., the best way to combat
heart disease is to know the risk factors, "own"
the risk factors that apply to you, and address the ones that
are controllable. "I think many people can rattle off
risk factors, but then they don't internalize them to say:
'That's a risk factor for me. I am at risk for heart disease.
And now I'm going to do something about it,'" Tracy says.
Taking
Charge of Your Health
Because
of advances in medicine and technology, people with heart
disease are living longer, more productive lives than ever
before. But prevention is still the best weapon in the fight
against heart disease. As with anything in life, there are
no guarantees. You could do all the right things and still
develop heart disease because there are so many factors involved.
But by living a healthier life, you could delay heart disease
for years or minimize its damage. Whether you are already
healthy, are at high risk for heart disease, or have survived
a heart attack, the advice to protect your heart is the same.
Get
moving and maintain a healthy weight. Exercise improves
heart function, lowers blood pressure and blood cholesterol,
and boosts energy. And being overweight forces the heart to
work harder. But about 1 in 4 U.S. adults are sedentary.
The general
recommendation from the NHLBI is to get at least 30 minutes
of moderate physical activity on most, and preferably all,
days of the week. And you don't need to run a marathon or
buy an expensive gym club membership to do it. The 30 minutes
also don't have to be done all at once, but can be broken
up into 10-minute intervals throughout your day.
"Exercising
is like taking the pennies from under the couch cushions and
putting them into your piggybank," says Ann Bolger, M.D.,
a spokeswoman for the American Heart Association (AHA) and
a cardiologist in San Francisco. "Every little bit counts."
Vigorous
exercise like running or doing aerobics brings more health
benefits than lighter intensity activities, but walking is
a great form of exercise. Brisk walking can get your heart
rate up and give you a solid workout. Walking at a comfortable
pace can work well for many people, too. "The best exercise
is the one you feel good about and can do over and over again,"
Bolger says. And it's easier to work exercise into your everyday
routine than you might think.
For example,
Bolger suggests parking farther away when you go to the grocery
store or to your office to create a longer walk, taking the
stairs, walking all the way around a mall the next time you
go shopping, and walking around your neighborhood. Getting
support from a walking buddy or a walking group can be a good
way to keep you motivated.
Talk
with your doctor about what form of exercise is best for you.
Those with severe heart disease, for example, are advised
against strenuous exercise.
Desvigne-Nickens
suggests that you teach your children early that exercise
is fun and good for them. Families can walk together, ride
bikes, and chase after balls in a park. "But we have
to show them," she says. "Our children are exercising
their thumbs with computers and video games, and obesity in
childhood is epidemic."
Stick
to a nutritious, well-balanced diet. This advice
might make you groan if your usual lunch consists of cheeseburgers
with french fries or pizza slices topped with sausage. But
the good news is that diet isn't an all-or-nothing affair.
A heart-healthy
diet means a diet that's low in fat, cholesterol, and salt,
and high in fruits, vegetables, grains, and fiber. "But
it doesn't mean that you can never have pizza or ice cream
again," Bolger says. You could start by telling yourself
that you will eat a big leafy green salad first, and then
you will have one slice of cheese pizza, not three slices
with sausage. "Or if you must have a burger, don't get
your usual order of french fries," Bolger suggests. "That
alone cuts hundreds of calories."
Experts
point out that a heart-healthy diet should be the routine.
That way, when you have high-fat food every now and then,
you're still on track. Making a high-fat diet the routine
is asking for trouble.
Bolger
teaches people about the AHA's Simple Solutions program, which
helps women--often the ones who do the cooking and grocery
shopping--adopt simple ways to improve eating habits for the
whole family. For example, it's wise to make a grocery list
so that you can carefully plan your meals. "You have
to make a conscious decision to make your snack a bag of grapes
instead of a candy bar or cookies," Bolger says.
Bolger also asks her patients to tell her the food or food
group that gets them into trouble. If you pin that down you
can start to make healthy substitutions. Tell Bolger that
overloading on ice cream is your downfall and she'll tell
you about her recipe for a berry dessert: Use nonfat yogurt,
sweeten it up as much as you want with a sugar substitute,
add a drop of vanilla extract, microwave frozen strawberries
briefly to soften them up, add the berries, stir it all around,
and enjoy.
Like
exercise, good eating habits need to start early. "Teaching
your children to eat well is one of the most loving things
you can do for them," Bolger says. Your children tend
to follow your lead, eat what you eat, and eat what you put
in front of them. It's up to you how often you put a banana
in front of them instead of high-fat cookies.
Look
at the Nutrition Facts label on the foods you buy for guidance.
The general rule of thumb is that foods that provide 5 percent
of the daily value (DV) of fat or less are low in fat, and
foods that are labeled as providing 20 percent or more of
the daily value are high in fat.
Control
your blood pressure. About 50 million American adults
have high blood pressure, also called hypertension. The top
number of a blood pressure reading, called the systolic pressure,
represents the force of blood in the arteries as the heart
beats. The bottom number, called diastolic pressure, is the
force of blood in the arteries as the heart relaxes between
beats. High blood pressure makes the heart work extra hard
and hardens artery walls, increasing the risk of heart disease
and stroke.
A blood
pressure level of 140 over 90 mm Hg (millimeters of mercury)
or higher is considered high. The NHLBI recently set a new
"prehypertension" level of any reading above 120
over 80 mm Hg.
Poor
eating habits and physical inactivity both contribute to high
blood pressure. According to the NHLBI, table salt increases
average levels of blood pressure, and this effect is greater
in some people than in others.
The National
Institutes of Health's DASH diet (Dietary Approaches to Stop
Hypertension) is rich in fruits, vegetables, and low-fat dairy
foods, and low in total and saturated fat. The DASH diet also
reduces red meat, sweets, and sugary drinks, and it's rich
in potassium, calcium, magnesium, fiber, and protein.
It's
important to keep on top of your blood pressure levels through
regular doctor visits. High blood pressure disproportionately
affects racial and ethnic minority groups, including blacks,
Hispanics, and American Indians/Alaska Natives. The condition
is known as a silent killer because there are no symptoms.
If lifestyle changes alone don't bring your blood pressure
within the normal range, medications may also be needed.
Recent
NHLBI research has shown that older, less costly diuretics
work better than newer medicines to treat high blood pressure.
These findings, part of the Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering
Treatment to Prevent Heart Attack Trial (ALLHAT), were published
in the Dec. 18, 2002, issue of the Journal of the American
Medical Association.
Control
blood cholesterol. Cholesterol is a fat-like substance
in the blood. High levels of triglycerides, another form of
fat in the blood, can also indicate heart disease risk.
As with
blood pressure, eating a low-fat, low-cholesterol diet and
engaging in physical activity can lower cholesterol levels.
Your body turns saturated fats into cholesterol. And the higher
your cholesterol level, the more likely it is that the substance
will build up and stick to artery walls.
The only
way to find out your cholesterol levels is to go to a doctor
and have a blood test after fasting for nine to 12 hours.
A lipoprotein profile will reveal your total cholesterol,
which is measured in milligrams (mg) of cholesterol per deciliter
(dL) of blood. Total cholesterol less than 200 mg/dL is desirable,
200-239 mg/dL is borderline high, and 240 mg/dL or more is
high.
Low-density
lipoprotein (LDL), also known as "bad" cholesterol,
should be less than 100 mg/dL. A level of 100-129 mg/dL is
near optimal/above optimal, 130-159 mg/dL is borderline high,
160-189 mg/dL is high, and 190 mg/dL and above is very high.
High-density
lipoprotein (HDL), also known as "good" cholesterol,
protects the arteries from bad cholesterol buildup, so the
higher the HDL, the better. HDL levels of 60 mg/dL or more
help lower heart disease risk, and an HDL level of less than
40 mg/dL is considered low.
People
ages 20 and older should have cholesterol measured at least
once every five years. If lifestyle changes alone don't adequately
budge cholesterol levels, medications may be needed.
Experts
say the drug class known as "statins" marks a significant
advance in preventing heart disease. These drugs work by partially
blocking the synthesis of cholesterol in the liver, which
helps remove cholesterol from the blood. Along with lowering
cholesterol, statins help stabilize blood vessel membranes.
Examples include Lescol (fluvastatin), Pravachol (pravastatin),
Zocor (simvastatin), and Lipitor (atorvastatin). The most
recent addition to this class, AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals'
Crestor (rosuvastatin), was approved by the Food and Drug
Administration in August 2003. Even with drug treatment, a
cholesterol-lowering diet and exercise are still recommended.
Heart-Smart
Substitutions
| INSTEAD
OF: |
DO
THIS: |
| whole
or 2 percent milk and cream |
use
1 percent or skim milk |
| fried
foods |
eat
baked, steamed, boiled, broiled, or microwaved foods |
| lard,
butter, palm and coconut oils |
cook
with unsaturated vegetable oils such as corn, olive, canola,
safflower, sesame, soybean, sunflower, or peanut |
| fatty
cuts of meat |
eat
lean cuts of meat or cut off the fatty parts |
| one
whole egg in recipes |
use
two egg whites |
| sauces,
butter, and salt |
season
vegetables with herbs and spices |
| regular
hard and processed cheeses |
eat
low-fat, low-sodium cheeses |
| salted
potato chips |
choose
low-fat, unsalted tortilla and potato chips and unsalted
pretzels and popcorn |
| sour
cream and mayonnaise |
use
plain low-fat yogurt, low-fat cottage cheese, or low-fat
or "light" sour cream |
Prevent
and manage diabetes. About 17 million people in the
United States have diabetes, and heart disease is the leading
cause of death of those with the disease. According to the
American Diabetes Association (ADA), 2 out of 3 people with
diabetes die from heart disease or stroke.
Diabetes
is a disease in which the body does not properly produce or
use insulin. Insulin is a hormone needed to convert sugar,
starches, and other nutrients into energy. Another 16 million
Americans have pre-diabetes, a condition in which blood glucose
levels are higher than normal, but not high enough to be diagnosed
as diabetes. Genetics and lifestyle factors such as obesity
and physical inactivity can lead to diabetes.
One in
three people who have diabetes don't know they have it. See
a doctor if you have any diabetes symptoms, which include
frequent urination, excessive thirst, extreme hunger, unusual
weight loss, increased fatigue, irritability, and blurry vision.
Quit
smoking. Ditch the cigarettes and you'll dramatically
lower your heart attack risk. And if you don't smoke, don't
start. Along with raising your risk of lung cancer and other
diseases, the mixture of tar, nicotine, and carbon monoxide
in tobacco smoke increases the risk that your arteries will
harden, which restricts blood flow to the heart.
Smokers
have more than twice the risk of having a heart attack as
non-smokers. According to the AHA, smoking is the biggest
risk factor for sudden cardiac death, and smokers who have
a heart attack are more likely to die than non-smokers who
have a heart attack.
In the
first year that you stop smoking, your risk of coronary heart
disease drops sharply, according to the NHLBI. And over time,
your risk will gradually return to that of someone who has
never smoked.
Minimize
stress. After having a heart attack in 1987, Dennis
Everett, 61, retired early from a high-stress job and moved
with his wife, Joyce, from Vienna, Va., to Berkeley Springs,
W.Va.--a rural resort town that gives Everett a relaxing life.
Stress
management was a major part of Everett's recovery, which also
included improving his diet, going for daily walks, and giving
up smoking. "I couldn't have done it without the support
of my wife," he says. "Spouses also have a big adjustment."
The link
between stress and heart disease isn't completely clear, but
what's known for sure is that stress speeds up the heart rate.
And people with heart disease are more likely to have a heart
attack during times of stress.
Everett
was serving as coach for a girls' softball team when the pain
he had been experiencing in his left arm for a few days became
unbearable. "It hurt so bad that I had to hold my left
arm up with my right one," he says. He happened to mention
his symptoms to a player's father, a dentist. "He told
me, 'I hate to tell you this, but those are the signs of a
heart attack,'" Everett says. "That's when we called
911."
Heart
Attack Symptoms
Research
has shown that people typically wait two hours or more before
seeking emergency care for heart attack symptoms. It could
be because they are uncertain about their symptoms or concerned
that it might be a false alarm. But clot-busting medications
and other effective treatments that restore blood flow and
save heart muscle are most effective in the first hour following
a heart attack.
Symptoms
of heart attack include chest discomfort or pain, discomfort
in the arm(s), back, neck, jaw, or stomach, shortness of breath,
breaking out in a cold sweat, nausea, and lightheadedness.
Most heart attacks don't involve someone clutching the chest
and dropping to the floor like you might see on TV. It's also
important to know that heart attack symptoms for men can be
different than symptoms for women.
"The
classic sign is when someone comes into the emergency room,
puts their fist on their chest, and says it feels like a squeezing
pressure," says Cynthia Tracy, M.D., chief of cardiology
at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington, D.C. "But
it's not always like that. For women, it may present as back
pain, flu-like symptoms, or a sense of impending doom."
"We
need women to be aware of their symptoms, and we need doctors
to put the pieces together and say, 'This woman is postmenopausal
and her mother died of a heart attack at 47. So even though
her symptoms don't sound classic, I need to investigate her
for coronary disease.'"
When
Bonnie Brown, 50, of Baltimore, felt a sharp pain in the middle
of her chest in 1997, she thought it was indigestion and assumed
the feeling would pass. But something made her tell her sister,
Joan Hamilton, 53, who lived with her at the time. Joan noticed
how pale Bonnie looked and insisted they call an ambulance.
Soon after, doctors confirmed that she was having a heart
attack.
Then,
amazingly enough, Joan also had a heart attack--two weeks
after Bonnie did. For Joan, her main symptom was persistent
pain in the left arm. "I thought it was from lifting
boxes," Joan says, "but I don't tolerate pain too
well so I checked it out."
Both
Bonnie and Joan used to think heart disease was only for men.
Both women are part of the Red Dress Project, the centerpiece
of the Heart Truth campaign, sponsored by the National Institutes
of Health, to educate women about heart disease. The Red Dress
Project features a collection of 19 red dresses from America's
most prestigious designers, with the dresses symbolizing the
fact that heart disease is a women's issue too.
Treating
Heart Disease
Once
doctors determine that you have clogged coronary arteries,
the treatment plan typically involves a combination of drugs,
lifestyle changes, and procedures that open up the arteries.
Drugs:
Thrombolytic drugs, also referred to as "clot-busting
drugs," are given during a heart attack to dissolve blood
clots in coronary arteries and restore blood flow to the heart.
Because
of its anti-clotting abilities, aspirin is recognized by the
Food and Drug Administration as safe and effective to help
lower the risk of having a second heart attack.
Other
drugs commonly used to treat people with heart disease include
drugs that lower blood pressure, angiotensin-converting enzyme
(ACE) inhibitors, which help the heart pump blood better,
and beta blockers, which slow the heart down. Nitrates and
calcium channel blockers relax blood vessels and relieve chest
pain. Diuretics decrease fluid in the body. Blood cholesterol-lowering
drugs reduce levels of low-density lipoproteins (LDL), the
"bad" cholesterol, in the blood and increase high-density
lipoproteins (HDL), the "good" cholesterol.
Catheter-based
treatments: Angioplasty is a procedure in which a
thin tube called a catheter is put into an artery in the groin
and threaded up to the narrowed artery in the heart. The catheter,
which has a balloon at the tip, is used to widen the artery.
Routinely, tiny mesh wire tubes called stents are then inserted
into the artery to hold it open permanently. But a major challenge
is restenosis, which is the reclogging or renarrowing of an
artery after angioplasty or stenting.
Maureen
Magoon, 67, of Blairsville, Ga., who was diagnosed with heart
disease in 1999, has experienced problems with restenosis
since receiving angioplasty. So when her doctors at the Emory
Heart Center in Atlanta recently discovered that another one
of her arteries was clogged, they determined that she was
a good candidate to receive the Cypher Stent from Cordis Corp.,
the first drug-eluting stent. The new stent, approved by the
FDA in May 2003, releases the drug sirolimus, which reduces
the risk that the artery will reclog.
A process
called intravascular radiation therapy, which uses radiation
to kill cells that are clogging an artery, is sometimes used
during angioplasty procedures. Also known as brachytherapy,
this treatment is not approved for use with the placement
of a stent for a vessel that has never been treated, says
Jonette Foy, Ph.D., a biomedical engineer in the FDA's Center
for Devices and Radiological Health. "Brachytherapy is
approved for vessels that have been previously stented, but
reoccluded over time."
Coronary
bypass surgery: In cases of severe blockages or when
someone is unresponsive to medications or not a candidate
for angioplasty, doctors may perform coronary bypass surgery.
This involves taking a blood vessel from the leg or chest
and grafting it onto the blocked artery to bypass the blockage.
In the
last few years, the FDA has approved several devices that
improve heart disease diagnosis and treatment. For example,
after a person has received coronary bypass surgery, devices
are used to catch loose particles that could potentially float
downstream and clog another artery. This process is known
as embolic protection.
C-reactive
Protein: A New Risk Factor
Among
the new risk factors that may be linked to increased risk
of cardiovascular disease is C-reactive protein (CRP). It's
produced by the liver as a response to injury or infection
and is a sign of inflammation in the body. Research correlates
high levels of CRP with an increased risk of heart attack
and stroke. Though the evidence is conflicting, some researchers
believe that CRP itself is not a risk factor, but elevated
levels of CRP could mean that some part of the cardiovascular
system is inflamed, which can lead to stroke or heart attack.
Information about CRP and other new risk factors is still
emerging.
Source:
Mayo Clinic
For More
Information
National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
(800) 575-WELL
(800-575-9355)
www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/hearttruth
|