Women Should Cut Heart
Disease Risks Before Menopause
The
longer women wait, the greater the threat
The ticking of a woman's
biological clock signals the approaching end of her reproductive
years. But a new study suggests it should also serve as an alarm
about increasing risks for heart disease.
The research says waiting
until after menopause to take steps to reduce the risk of a heart
attack or stroke is waiting too long.
"What this research tells
us is that the time to begin reducing your risk of heart disease
is before you actually are at risk. And for women, that means making
the appropriate lifestyle and dietary changes prior to when menopause
begins," says Carol Derby, study author and an assistant professor
of neurology and epidemiology at the Albert Einstein College of
Medicine in New York City.
The findings were presented
at the American Heart Association's recent
annual conference on cardiovascular disease, epidemiology, and prevention
in Miami.
The research involved
some 1,300 women between the ages of 42 and 52 who were evaluated
for future risk of heart disease. Based on their current status,
by the time they turned 55, more than half the women would need
some type of lifestyle change or drug therapy to avoid a heart attack
or stroke, the researchers projected.
Perimenopause
Key Time To Address Heart-Related Health Issues
The take-home message,
says Derby, is clear: "Women need to recognize that the perimenopausal
period is the key time in which to address the issues that increase
their risk of heart disease later in life—and to do so before
they reach the point where their age becomes another significant
risk factor."
For cardiologist Dr. Dan
Fisher of New York University Medical Center, the advice is sound
but can be a double-edged sword.
"While it's a good idea
to reduce risk factors for heart disease before problems develop,
at the same time women should not come away with the idea that they
can throw caution to the wind up to age 54 and then suddenly make
the appropriate changes, because that's not always going to help,"
he says.
Most
Risk Factors For Heart Disease Have Cumulative Effect
In reality, Fisher says,
most risk factors for heart disease have a cumulative effect. So
the earlier you begin to adopt healthy behaviors—such as quitting
smoking, losing weight, or keeping appropriate cholesterol levels—the
better off you will be.
The new study was based,
in part, on the National Cholesterol Education Program Adult
Treatment Panel Guidelines. They are part of a system that
utilizes a series of risk factors, including age, to determine at
what point cholesterol levels require medical intervention to protect
against heart disease. That intervention can include drug therapy
or lifestyle changes, such as losing weight, or both.
According to the guidelines,
the age at which intervention is usually first considered is 55,
so the researchers used this year as a criterion in their study
as well. Then they looked at the current heart disease risk profiles
of the women in the study, who came from five different racial or
ethnic groups. Those profiles included current cholesterol levels,
blood pressure and amount of body fat, as well as contributing lifestyle
factors such as smoking.
"If nothing else about
these women would change, we used their current risk profile to
project into the future and see how many would fall into the treatment
category by the time they turned 55," Derby says.
The end result: The projections
showed that if nothing else but age changed, 65 percent of the women
would require treatment to avoid serious heart disease. Of that
65 percent, 19 percent were Hispanic; 18 percent were African-American;
15 percent, Caucasian, 8 percent, Japanese; and 5 percent, Chinese.
This information will
hopefully help women realize the need to look at themselves and
their health risks during the perimenopausal years, and make the
changes that can affect their heart disease risk later in life,
Derby says.
Fisher agrees, but also
suggests that change is needed much earlier. "We need to make reducing
the risk for heart disease a lifetime lifestyle, beginning as young
as possible," he says.
Always consult your physician
for more information.
Heart
Disease Prevention
Living a healthier lifestyle
can help to prevent heart disease. This includes the following:
-
eliminating
all tobacco products
You should be aware that all tobacco products are included
as risk factors for chronic illness, not just cigarettes.
And, although there may be medical uses from derivatives of
some social drugs, such as alcohol, there is no therapeutic
use for nicotine. As soon as you stop smoking, your body begins
to heal itself from the devastating effects of tobacco.
-
adhering
to a heart-healthy diet
One aspect of managing your heart attack risk factors includes
eating a heart-healthy diet, including appropriate levels
of the following:
-
calories
-
cholesterol
-
fat
-
fiber
-
sodium
Refer to the government's
food pyramid and food labeling laws and consult your physician
or a registered dietitian for more information.
Maintaining a heart-healthy,
balanced diet will help to:
-
manage stroke
and heart-attack risk factors.
-
prevent or manage
other chronic diseases.
-
assist in losing
weight and boosting energy.
-
promote overall
good health.
-
following
an appropriate exercise program
One vital step toward reducing your chances of having a heart
attack is making the time to exercise. Today, with our fast-paced
society, people must schedule time to exercise. Choose an
activity that you enjoy doing, then talk with your physician
about an exercise plan that meets your individual capabilities
and needs.
An exercise program
will help in the management of almost all stroke and heart attack
risk factors.
Online
Resources
(Our Organization is not
responsible for the content of Internet sites.)
American
Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
American
Heart Association
National
Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel Guidelines
National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
National
Institutes of Health (NIH)
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April 2003
The
Longer Women Wait, the Greater the Threat
Perimenopause
Key Time To Address Heart-Related Health Issues
Most
Risk Factors For Heart Disease Have Cumulative Effect
Heart
Disease Prevention
Heart
Disease Prevention Should Actually Start In Childhood
Online
Resources
In Other News About Your
Heart Health:
Heart
Disease Prevention Should Actually Start In Childhood
New guidelines
recommend heart healthy behavior for kids
Armed with increasing
proof that heart disease begins in childhood, the American
Heart Association has issued the first set of heart disease
prevention guidelines aimed specifically at children.
"Many studies have shown
an association between atherosclerosis and high cholesterol, high
blood pressure, and obesity beginning in children as young as 5
years old," says Dr. Rae-Ellen Kavey, chairman of cardiology at
the Children's Memorial Hospital in Chicago and lead author of the
guidelines.
Yet, she adds, while guidelines
exist for preventive care for adults at risk for heart disease,
there were no similar guidelines for children despite the knowledge
that early intervention can be enormously effective in delaying
the onset of disease.
"It's a process that begins
in childhood, so guidelines have to begin in childhood," she says.
Kavey presented the guidelines
at the American Heart Association's recent
annual conference on cardiovascular disease, epidemiology, and prevention
in Miami.
A year in the making,
the guidelines present a comprehensive list of the health risks
associated with heart disease, including overweight, high blood
pressure and/or cholesterol, diabetes, and a family history of heart
disease. They are followed by recommendations to pediatricians for
reducing those risks.
"It's all put together
in one statement to emphasize that physicians need to think of these
things together. It's something to put on a bulletin board in their
offices," says Dr. Stephen Daniels, a pediatrics professor at Cincinnati
Children's Hospital Medical Center who also collaborated on the
guidelines.
The guidelines offer a
list of things physicians can do to promote cardiovascular health
in all children and directives for young people already at risk
for heart disease. Included as well is a large bibliography of studies
for physicians who want to read the research upon which the recommendations
are based.
For otherwise healthy
children and teens, suggestions are to regularly assess children's
heart health by checking weight, blood pressure, and lipid levels
if deemed necessary. The guidelines also ask physicians to recommend
healthy food choices, such as eating more fruits and vegetables,
to restrict the intake of saturated fats to less than 10 percent
of a child's daily caloric intake, and to keep sugar intake low.
Next, the guidelines emphasize
the importance of limiting sedentary activity—no more than
two hours of television and/or sitting at the computer, for instance—and
being physically active every day. The dangers of smoking are also
discussed. The authors hope this focus will prompt healthier behaviors
when children are young.
"It's much easier to establish
healthy eating and physical activity patterns than to change unhealthy
patterns later," Kavey says.
The second part of the
guidelines targets those children or teenagers already at high risk
of cardiovascular disease. These include children with a body mass
index (BMI) over the 85th percentile for age, height and weight,
a blood pressure reading in the 90th percentile for age, sex, and
height, and a cholesterol reading of 170 or higher. Also putting
children at higher risk is family history of heart disease, particularly
if male family relatives had heart disease before age 55 and female
relatives before the age of 65.
Information here concerns
specific monitoring of weight, diet and physical activity, blood
pressure, cholesterol, and recommendations for interventions with
medications.
"These guidelines are
excellent tools for educating pediatric providers," says Dr. Thomas
Klitzner, chief of pediatric cardiology at the Mattel Children's
Hospital, University of California at Los Angeles.
"The problems, particularly
of obesity, are daunting, and steps like this are essential if we
are going to begin to approach a solution to this problem," he adds.
Always consult your child's physician
for more information.
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