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Cardiovascular disease

Cardiovascular disease refers to the class of diseases that involve the heart and/or blood vessels (arteries and veins). These problems are most commonly due to consequences of arterial disease, atherosclerosis, but also can be related to infection, valvular, and clotting problems.

Over 50 million Americans have heart and cardiovascular-related problems. Cardiovascular disease is the number 1 cause of death and disability in the United States. By the time that heart problems are detected, the disease is usually quite advanced (having progressed for decades), often too advanced to allow successful prevention of major permanent disability or death.

Table of contents

Forms of cardiovascular disease

Major forms of cardiovascular disease include:

Specific illness features (sequelae) may include: arterial enlargements, arterial narrowings, high blood pressure, angina, irregular heart rates, inappropriate rapid heart rate, inappropriate slow heart rate, heart attack, heart enlargement, heart muscle weakness, inflammation of the heart muscle, overall heart pumping weakness, heart valve leaks, heart valve stenosis (failure-to-open fully), infection of the heart valve leaflets and heart stoppage.

Risk Factors

Major risk factors of cardiovascular disease include:

  • Pre-existing cardiovascular disease (usually not recognized by people or their physicians until very advanced)
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • Less than excellent lipoprotein particle profile
  • Smoking
  • Higher fibrinogen blood concentrations
  • Upper half of normal and especially elevated homocysteine
  • Aging and being male (women have more problems after menopause, but hormone replacement therapy worsens rather than improves the risk)
  • Hypertension
  • Above optimal weight, especially increased intra-abdominal fat (even in people who appear thin)
  • Genetic factors (most humans are genetically prone)
  • Physically inactive
  • Male sex (although cardiovascular disease is also the number health problem for women)
  • Positive family history

Prevention

Some steps an individual can take to reduce the risk of cardivascular disease include:

Diet

a low energy diet

Exercise

aerobic exercise, which will increase the strength of the heart

Treatment

Treatment of cardiovascular disease depends on the specific form of the disease in each patient, but effective treatment always includes lifestyle changes consistent with prevention. Medications, such as blood-pressure-reducing medications, aspirin, and other treatments, may be involved. In some circumstances, surgery may be warranted to repair or replace damaged blood vessels or heart tissue.

Research

The causes, prevention, and treatment of all forms of cardiovascular disease are active fields of biomedical research.








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