Who is at risk of heart disease or stroke?

The UK has one of the highest rates of death from heart disease in the world with one British adult dying from the disease every three minutes.

Cardio and vascular diseases such as a heart attack, stroke, diabetes and chronic kidney disease, affect the lives of over four million people, causing 170,000 deaths a year.


Many people assume that heart disease and a stroke occur in the heart and are similar in nature, when in fact they are totally different but share similar traits.

A stroke actually occurs when blood vessels burst or blood clots occur on the brain. In both cases the brain is starved of oxygen, damaging or killing cells.

The heart pumps 100,000 times a day, 2.5bn in an average lifetime. If this process is interrupted it can cause serious illness or instant death.

Even though they occur in different parts of the body, the causes of the two deadly diseases are exactly the same.
There are three major risk factors in the industry which cannot be changed when it comes to these diseases, including age, hereditary and gender.

From the age of 65 most people are prone to heart problems and need to take extra care with their diet and lifestyle.

Unfortunately if it runs in the immediate family you can be at a higher risk of having a heart attack or stroke, or if you have had one before you can also be at a greater risk of it happening again.

Heart problems are generally more common in men than women however more than half the total stroke deaths occur in women.

Some of the most common causes of heart disease or strokes include smoking, poor diet, little exercise, drug taking and drinking alcohol excessively.

These problems can be tackled through small changes in lifestyle which can be a massive improvement to your health and extending your life.

Simple Steps To A Healthy Heart

Heart disease is still the biggest cause of death in the UK, but the good news is that in most cases it is preventable. Understanding what poses the most risk to you, and making simple and achievable life changes, could be the best thing you have ever done.

There are several causes of heart disease, and most people who experience a heart attack, or stroke, have a combination of factors that put them at increased risk. Fortunately it’s possible to recognise the factors that present the most risk to you, and modify those risks. By doing so you can capitalise on the truism that “prevention is better than cure” – and look forward to a healthier future.

Smoking

Smokers often say that the habit relaxes them, but in fact the nicotine in cigarettes makes the heart beat faster, raises your blood pressure and stimulates production of the stress hormone adrenaline. Smoking also thickens the blood making it more likely to clot and cause a heart attack. The antioxidants in cigarette smoke damage the lining of the arteries allowing bad cholesterol to form plaque called atherosclerosis which is the main cause of heart attacks and stroke.

Prevention: If you smoke, resolve to quit now. Find help at

 * BHF Smoking Helpline 0800 169 1900 BHF’s Giving Up Smoking website

    * Quitline® 0800 00 22 00 www.quit.org.uk

    * NHS Smoking Helpline 0800 169 0 169 www.gosmokefree.co.uk

    * ASH (Action on Smoking and Health) 020 7739 5902 www.ash.org.uk

Blood pressure

This is a measure of the pressure in your blood vessels as the heart pumps blood through the arteries. When the heart contracts blood pressure is at its highest point. In a blood pressure reading this is the systolic pressure. When the heart relaxes between beats the lowest pressure – the diasystolic pressure is recorded. The pressures are written as two numbers with the higher pressure first. Ideally blood pressure should be below 130/80 for the lowest risk of heart disease. Most people’s blood pressure fluctuates during the day, but always increases in stressful situations. If you have high blood pressure (hypertension) your blood pressure is constantly higher than the recommended level.

High blood pressure causes damage to artery walls making them more susceptible to atherosclerosis.

Prevention: To maintain a healthy blood pressure or reduce hypertension to take enough physical activity, be a healthy weight, do not eat too much salt or drink too much alcohol, and eat a healthy balanced diet.

Weight

Being overweight puts as much strain on the heart as it does on joints and muscles. Carrying excess weight, especially around the waist increases your risk of heart disease. Losing just a modest amount of weight, as little as 5-10% of your starting weight, reduces your risk.

Prevention: The healthiest way to lose weight for your heart is to avoid crash diets and lose weight at a slow, steady rate of 1-2lbs or half a kilo a week by reducing portion sizes and calorie intake in combination with being more physically active. However, even slim people can be at increased risk if they have atherosclerosis.

Diabetes

Diabetes occurs when levels of glucose (sugar) in the blood are too high. This happens either because not enough insulin is produced or it is not very effective (insulin resistance). Insulin is needed to move glucose from the blood to the cells. People with Type 2 diabetes have an increased risk of heart attack because if undiagnosed, or poorly controlled, too much glucose remains in the bloodstream instead of being taken up by the cells. Excess sugar damages the arteries making it easier for atherosclerosis to occur.

Prevention: In most people Type 2 diabetes, can be prevented by being physically active and a healthy weight. Abdominal fat increases the risk of diabetes. Women should aim to have a waist measuring less than 31.5in. For Asian men aim for less than 35in, or 37in for white and black men.

Cholesterol and Atherosclerosis

Raised cholesterol levels are a widely acknowledged risk for heart disease. Too much bad (LDL) cholesterol is caused, in most cases, by eating an unhealthy diet, especially too much saturated fat, and not being active enough. When there is too much LDL cholesterol it is in danger of being damaged through oxidation. Oxidation of LDL is caused by highly active molecules called free-radicals produced during normal body processes and by exposure to smoking and other pollutants.

Surprisingly even people without raised levels of LDL cholesterol can still have life-threatening atherosclerosis if their diet does not contain enough antioxidants to prevent oxidation. Half of all strokes and heart attacks occur in people who do not have raised LDL.

Prevention: Preventing atherosclerosis is possible by eating an exemplary diet containing enough of the right sort of antioxidants, taking enough exercise, not smoking, avoiding high blood pressure, not having Type 2 diabetes and being a healthy weight with a healthy waistline.

The Mediterranean Diet is scientifically acknowledged to be an exemplary diet for heart health and risk reduction for stroke. Much of the heart benefit in the diet comes from the antioxidant lycopene in tomatoes that are eaten daily in the Mediterranean diet. Lycopene has been shown in studies to be the most beneficial antioxidant for heart disease; where vitamin E and beta-carotene have not proved successful, lycopene has.

Numerous studies have shown that the higher the levels of lycopene in the body the lower the rate of oxidation of LDL cholesterol. But the intake in a  typical UK diet is only around 1mg per day and as clinical studies of a new lycopene-based supplement Ateronon® show to prevent oxidation we need a lot more.

A daily capsule of Ateronon®, which is also known as the tomato pill, provides 7mg lycopene in a unique patented form that combines lycopene with whey protein and soy making it easily bioavailable so that it can be used effectively by the body. In clinical studies Ateronon® lowered LDL oxidation by more than 90 per cent within two months in both heart patients and healthy individuals. Unlike cholesterol-lowering medications such as statins, Ateronon has no reported side-effects. It can also be taken safely alongside statins and other heart medications.

Ateronon – A New Way To Cut Heart And Stroke Risk

New way to cut heart and stroke risk

The story is about a clinically proven supplement that prevents oxidation of LDL cholesterol, which as you know, is the first step in the build up of atherosclerosis, the main cause of heart attack, stroke – and even circulatory dementia and AMD (age related macular degeneration).

The supplement, medical name Ateronon, is based on lycopene, but whereas other supplements on sale are not bioavailable and haven’t been proved in clinical studies, this one has – so it’s going to be launched in June at the British Cardiovascular Conference for cardiologists at Excel, London.

The feature would be a useful way of reminding readers how their clogged up arteries can have even more consequences than a heart attack (i.e. stroke, AMD, dementia, other diseases of circulation).

But it is also a Good News story, because it is something practical that readers can do to help prevent atherosclerosis in the first place.

The product was developed by a Cambridge University biotechnology spin-off company, and is being referred to in the media as the tomato pill, and in addition to the clinical studies on patients that show more than 90% reduction in oxidation of ‘bad’ cholesterol within 2 months; there are on-going trials at Harvard Uni (re: reversal of atherosclerosis, reduction of hypertension), and at Addenbrooke’s, Cambridge Uni Hosp.