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Risk Factors for Coronary Artery Disease
Topic Overview
Some risk factors for coronary artery disease (CAD), such as your gender, age, and family history, cannot be changed. Other risk factors for CAD are related to lifestyle and often can be changed. Your chance of developing coronary artery disease increases with the number of risk factors you have.
Risk factors you can control
Rein In the Rage: Anger and Heart Disease
If a caller upsets you, do you hurl the phone across the room? Do you curse and blast the horn furiously if the driver in front of you takes three seconds to notice the green light? An angry temperament can hurt more than relationships -- anger and heart disease may go hand in hand, according to experts. "You're talking about people who seem to experience high levels of anger very frequently," says Laura Kubzansky, PhD, MPH, an assistant professor at the Harvard School of Public Health who...
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- Cigarette smoking
- High blood pressure (140/90 mm Hg or higher)
- High cholesterol
- Blood sugar levels, if you have diabetes
- Obesity (more than 120% of your ideal weight)
- Lack of exercise
- Personality factors and stress
- Use of birth control pills if you also smoke and are older than 35 or if you also have a family history of atherosclerosis or blood-clotting disorders
Smoking, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, and physical inactivity are all risk factors for coronary artery disease that can be modified and in some cases eliminated with lifestyle changes and medicines. Diabetes and obesity can sometimes be prevented when lifestyle changes are made early.
Risk factors you cannot control
- Family history: One or more of your close relatives have or had early CAD.
- Gender: Men generally develop CAD 10 years earlier than women, although by age 60, CAD becomes the leading cause of death in both genders.
- Age: People older than 65 are more likely to have CAD.
WebMD Medical Reference from Healthwise
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