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Heart Health

Eight Steps to a Healthy Heart

Step Four: Manage your risk factors

Managing your risk factors will reduce your risk of heart disease. Ways to reduce your risk include:


QUIT SMOKING!

Talk with your health care provider if you need help quitting. For more information on smoking cessation click here.
  • Smoking is a major cause of coronary heart disease among women. Risk increases with the number of cigarettes smoked and the duration of smoking.
  • Women who smoke have an increased risk for ischemic stroke (blood clot in one of the arteries supplying the brain) and subarachnoid hemorrhage (bleeding in the area surrounding the brain).
  • Women who smoke have an increased risk for peripheral vascular disease.
  • Smoking cessation reduces the excess risk of coronary heart disease, no matter at what age women stop smoking. The risk is substantially reduced within 1 or 2 years after they stop smoking.
  • The increased risk for stroke associated with smoking begins to reverse after women stop smoking. About 10 to 15 years after stopping, the risk for stroke approaches that of a woman who never smoked.

Additional Resources

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DEVELOP A HEART HEALTHY PERSONAL EATING PLAN

Be sure to talk with your health care provider first, before starting any type of eating plan.

When you develop your personal eating plan, be sure to:

  • Choose foods low in saturated fat.
  • Choose foods moderate in total fat.
  • Choose foods low in cholesterol.
  • Cut down on sodium (salt).

Additional Resources

Frequently Asked Questions about Heart Healthy Eating

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CONTROL BLOOD PRESSURE

As blood is pumped from your heart through your body, the blood puts force or pressure against the blood vessel (or artery) walls. Your blood pressure is a reading, or measure, of this pressure. When that reading goes above a certain point, it is called high blood pressure, another name for hypertension. When you have high blood pressure, it is partly because your blood vessels become narrower, forcing your heart to pump harder to move blood through your body. These changes cause the blood to press on the vessels walls with greater force.

Once you have high blood pressure, you usually have it for life. You can prevent high blood pressure or you can control high blood pressure if you already have it.

Additional Resources

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CONTROL YOUR CHOLESTEROL

What are the right cholesterol numbers?

Talk to your health care provider about the results of your cholesterol test. Cholesterol levels are measured in milligrams (mg) of cholesterol per deciliter (dL) of blood.

Total cholesterol level

A level of less than 200 mg/dL is desirable. But even levels of 200-239 mg/dL (borderline high) can increase your risk of heart disease.

 

Total Cholesterol LevelCategory
Less than 200 mg/dLDesirable
200-239 mg/dLBorderline high
240 mg/dL and aboveHigh

LDL (bad) cholesterol

A level of 160 mg/dL or above is high. Work with your health care provider to determine a goal LDL level that's best for you.

 

LDL Cholesterol LevelLDL Cholesterol Category
Less than 100 mg/dLOptimal
100-129 mg/dLNear optimal/above optimal
130-159 mg/dLBorderline high
160-189 mg/dLHigh
190 mg/dL and aboveVery high
* Cholesterol levels are measured in milligrams (mg) of cholesterol per deciliter (dL) of blood.

Additional Resources

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CONTROL YOUR BLOOD SUGAR

High blood sugar may indicate that you are at risk for developing diabetes.

A diagnosis of diabetes can be confirmed by a series of tests that might include:

  • A blood test that measures the glucose in your blood.

    A blood glucose level of 200 milligrams per deciliter (mg/dL) or greater, with symptoms, means that you have diabetes.

  • A blood test for glucose after you have fasted, called fasting plasma glucose (FPG) value.

    An FPG value of 126 mg/dL or greater means that you have diabetes.

  • A measurement of glucose in your blood through an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT).

    Although this test is no longer recommended because it is cumbersome, some health care providers may still use it. After fasting, you have to drink a glucose syrup and have a blood sample taken 2 hours later. An OGTT value of 200 mg/dL or greater means that you have diabetes.

People with test results between "normal" and "diabetes" levels have impaired glucose metabolism and are at risk for developing diabetes, heart attacks, and strokes.

Additional Resources

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CONTROL YOUR HEMOGLOBIN A1c

If you have diabetes, check your hemoglobin A1c and keep it under control.

Hemoglobin A1c measures blood sugar control over the previous three months. Ask you doctor to check your Hemoglobin A1c four times a year.

Additional Resources

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MAINTAIN A HEALTHY WEIGHT

To determine the body weight that is healthy for your height, it is helpful to calculate your body mass index (BMI). Body Mass Index Calculator will take you to a website that will calculate your BMI.

BMI Categories:

  • Underweight = BMI < 18.5
  • Normal weight = BMI 18.5-24.9
  • Overweight = BMI 25-29.9
  • Obese = BMI of 30 or greater

Additional Resources

Click on one of the following websites for more information on the impact that being overweight can have on your health.

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