CVD Prevention


 

SUMMARY: Heart attacks and strokes are the leading causes of death and burden.

Fact Sheet

Risk Factors

  • Smoking

  • Overweight and obesity

  • Unhealthy Diet

  • Physical Inactivity

  • Dyslipidemia

  • Hypertension

  • Diabetes Mellitus

Statistics

90% of stroke burden may be caused by modifiable risk factors.

90% of the risk for heart attacks is due to 9 modifiable risk factors.

Framingham Heart Study showed those with 5 risk factors had a 10-year risk of a first cardiovascular event of 25 to 30%.

Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease

Healthy Diet

  • High in fruits and vegetables such as the Mediterranean diet

  • High in fibre (cereals, whole grains, beans, broccoli, cauliflower, carrot, apple, pear, nuts)

  • High in Omega-3 fatty acids (salmon, mackerel, walnuts, chia seeds)

  • More monounsaturated fats (avocado, olive oil) and less trans-fatty acids (processed food) and less saturated fats (red meat)

  • Less sugar and lower refined carbohydrates (less added sugar, white rice, white bread, potato)

Smoking Cessation

  • Cigarette smoking is still the leading cause of premature death worldwide

  • Quitting is difficult. The best chance of success involves combining all of the following:

    • Setting a quit date within 2 weeks, quit abruptly on this date, gradual reduction prior is acceptable 

    • Behavioural techniques for cravings such as delaying, distraction

    • Baseline Nicotine Replacement Therapy (NRT)  such as nicotine patches and/or quick-acting options for cravings (lozenges, spray, gum, e-cigarette, inhaler)

    • Medication for cravings (Champix, Zyban) ideally for 3 to 6 months

    • Vaping is better than smoking but has its own risks

    • Remove all cigarettes from your house

    • Recruit friends and family members to help

    • Use programs like QuitLine 137848 or https://www.icanquit.com.au/

High blood pressure / Hypertension

  • Defined as blood pressure greater than 130/80 mmHg for most people

  • Modifiable therapies include

    • Dietary salt restriction reduces systolic blood pressure by 5 / 2.5 mmHg

    • Weight loss (about 0.5 to 2 points for every 1 kilogram of weight lost)

    • Diet high in fruit, vegetables, whole grains, fish, and nuts and low in both sugar and red meat helps (e.g. Mediterranean or DASH diet). Reduces blood pressure by 6 / 4 mmHg

    • Aerobic exercise (3 to 4 times per week) reducing by 4-6 / 3 mmHg

    • Ensuring enough dietary potassium helps a little

    • Limiting Alcohol helps. No more than 1-2 drinks daily.

  • Medications help. The decision to start medication is based on overall cardiovascular risk which we can measure. Anyone with blood pressure measured at home outside of a doctor's office that is consistently above 135 / 85 mmHg should consider medication.

Physical Activity

  • The recommendation is a bare minimum of 150 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise per week

    • For example, a brisk walk, for 30 minutes, 5 days per week

Weight Loss

  • The aim is as close as possible to a Body Bass Index (BMI) of 20 to 25. Any weight loss helps.

High Blood Cholesterol / Dyslipidemia

  • Can be hereditary and people with a strong family history should be screened early

  • Complicated topic but the general idea is:

    • High LDL is bad. Target < 4

    • High HDL is good. Target > 1

  • Modifiable changes include

    • A low-cholesterol diet alone doesn’t seem to help

    • The focus should be on the quality of cholesterol eaten and the ratio of good to bad 

    • Aim for more good cholesterol (more avocado, olive oil, fatty fish) 

    • Less bad cholesterol (trans-fatty acid in processed foods, and saturated meat in red meat)

    • High-fibre diet can lower LDL by 10%

    • Exercise can help to raise HDL by 10% and lower LDL by 10%

    • Eating more plants helps as they contain sterols with compete with the absorption of other cholesterol in the gut. They lower total cholesterol and LDL

    • Eating 30g of soy products a day reduced total cholesterol by 7 to 10%

    • Margarine should be cut out of your diet, but if not possible then replace it with olive oil or plant sterol enriched spread like Olive Grove.

  • Medications help. First-line medications are statins. Reduce LDL cholesterol by 30 to 40%

Type 2 Diabetes

  • Diabetes is a significant contributing factor to overall cardiovascular risk

  • Early aggressive treatment and tight blood glucose control helps

Omega-3 Fatty Acids

  • Omega-3 fatty acids are still being investigated but high levels are likely protective overall

    • One study showed about a 20% reduction in all causes of death including cardiovascular disease comparing those in the top 20% of the population with the highest Omega-3 levels versus those in the bottom 20% with the lowest Omega-3 levels

  • RDI Omega-3 for women 1.1g and men 1.6g

  • You can achieve the total recommended Omega-3 dose with any one of these items:

    • Salmon (350g for women, 500g for men) e.g. 2 x 250g salmon = total weekly dose

    • Mackerel (170g for women, 240g men)

    • Chia Seeds (45g for women, 60g for men)

    • Walnuts (21 for women, 30 for men)

Alcohol

  • Some evidence that the consumption of regular small amounts of alcohol has lower overall cardiovascular risk (1 standard drink per day on 6 days per week seems to be the right amount)

  • Binge drinking does not have the same benefit. Higher amounts of alcohol is harmful.

  • Doesn’t account for other risks associated with alcohol including increased risk of cancers such as breast cancer, liver disease, mental health, sexual assault, accidents and self-harm

Aspirin

  • Long-term aspirin leads for people who have not had a previous heart attack or stroke effects:

    • All-cause mortality - No impact or a very small reduction

    • Non-fatal heart attack - Sight Reduction

    • Non-fatal stroke - Likely no impact or a very small reduction

    • Colon cancer - Possible reduction 

    • The main risk is an increase of 50% for major bleeding, most of this was non-fatal

 

 
 
Previous
Previous

Molluscum

Next
Next

CADASIL