What Increases Your Risk
Some risk factors for
coronary artery disease (CAD), such as your sex, age,
and family history, cannot be changed. Other risk factors for CAD that are
related to lifestyle often can be changed. Your chance of developing coronary
artery disease increases with the number of risk factors you have.
Coronary artery disease risk factors
include:
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 medication.
Diabetes and obesity can sometimes be prevented when
lifestyle changes are made early in life.
Risk factors that you cannot change:
- Family history of heart disease. You
have a first-degree male relative (for example, your father or brother) who got
CAD when he was younger than age 55. Or you have a first-degree female relative
(for example, your mother or sister) who got CAD when she was younger than
65.
- Family history of
high
cholesterol.
- Gender. Men generally develop CAD 10 years
earlier than women. But women who have diabetes may develop CAD at a younger
age. By age 60, CAD is one of the leading causes of death in both
sexes.
- Age. People over 65 are more likely to have CAD.
Research has shown that having
metabolic syndrome also increases your risk of
coronary artery disease.4 People with metabolic
syndrome have a group of abnormal findings related to their
metabolism, including excess body fat (particularly
abdominal obesity); high triglycerides, high blood pressure, and high fasting
glucose; and low HDL.
The U.S. National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) has
developed a risk assessment calculator to estimate your risk of having a heart
attack or suffering from coronary death over 10 years. This tool is designed to
estimate risk in adults age 20 and older who do not have heart disease or
diabetes.
Click here to calculate your
risk of having a heart attack in the next 10
years
.