Risk Factors for Ischemic Heart Disease. 2019

Andrea Bisciglia, and Vincenzo Pasceri, and Diego Irini, and Antonio Varveri, and Giulio Speciale
San Filippo Neri Hospital, Via Giovanni Martinotti, 20, 00135 Rome, Italy.

Several risk factors have been empirically linked to an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Some of them are therapeutically amenable to modification; while others are not. Modifiable risk factors include physical inactivity, tobacco use, diet, "bad fats" in the blood, hypertension, and being overweight; while non-modifiable risk factors include the patient's family history, the presence versus absence of diabetes mellitus, and demographic characteristics like age, gender, ethnicity, and socio-economic status. In this article, we review those risk factors that are both clinically important and amenable to change. To prevent cardiovascular disease, it is important to minimize modifiable risk factors, like LDL cholesterol.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D012307 Risk Factors An aspect of personal behavior or lifestyle, environmental exposure, inborn or inherited characteristic, which, based on epidemiological evidence, is known to be associated with a health-related condition considered important to prevent. Health Correlates,Risk Factor Scores,Risk Scores,Social Risk Factors,Population at Risk,Populations at Risk,Correlates, Health,Factor, Risk,Factor, Social Risk,Factors, Social Risk,Risk Factor,Risk Factor Score,Risk Factor, Social,Risk Factors, Social,Risk Score,Score, Risk,Score, Risk Factor,Social Risk Factor
D017202 Myocardial Ischemia A disorder of cardiac function caused by insufficient blood flow to the muscle tissue of the heart. The decreased blood flow may be due to narrowing of the coronary arteries (CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE), to obstruction by a thrombus (CORONARY THROMBOSIS), or less commonly, to diffuse narrowing of arterioles and other small vessels within the heart. Severe interruption of the blood supply to the myocardial tissue may result in necrosis of cardiac muscle (MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION). Heart Disease, Ischemic,Ischemia, Myocardial,Ischemic Heart Disease,Disease, Ischemic Heart,Diseases, Ischemic Heart,Heart Diseases, Ischemic,Ischemias, Myocardial,Ischemic Heart Diseases,Myocardial Ischemias

Related Publications

Andrea Bisciglia, and Vincenzo Pasceri, and Diego Irini, and Antonio Varveri, and Giulio Speciale
January 1987, Voprosy pitaniia,
Andrea Bisciglia, and Vincenzo Pasceri, and Diego Irini, and Antonio Varveri, and Giulio Speciale
January 1980, North Carolina dental journal,
Andrea Bisciglia, and Vincenzo Pasceri, and Diego Irini, and Antonio Varveri, and Giulio Speciale
January 1988, Vutreshni bolesti,
Andrea Bisciglia, and Vincenzo Pasceri, and Diego Irini, and Antonio Varveri, and Giulio Speciale
January 1972, Vnitrni lekarstvi,
Andrea Bisciglia, and Vincenzo Pasceri, and Diego Irini, and Antonio Varveri, and Giulio Speciale
January 1981, Zeitschrift fur Alternsforschung,
Andrea Bisciglia, and Vincenzo Pasceri, and Diego Irini, and Antonio Varveri, and Giulio Speciale
March 1963, American journal of public health and the nation's health,
Andrea Bisciglia, and Vincenzo Pasceri, and Diego Irini, and Antonio Varveri, and Giulio Speciale
May 1999, Epidemiology (Cambridge, Mass.),
Andrea Bisciglia, and Vincenzo Pasceri, and Diego Irini, and Antonio Varveri, and Giulio Speciale
April 2003, Nihon rinsho. Japanese journal of clinical medicine,
Andrea Bisciglia, and Vincenzo Pasceri, and Diego Irini, and Antonio Varveri, and Giulio Speciale
January 1998, Medicina clinica,
Andrea Bisciglia, and Vincenzo Pasceri, and Diego Irini, and Antonio Varveri, and Giulio Speciale
January 1980, Vutreshni bolesti,
Copied contents to your clipboard!