Heart disease often develops quietly. Many people with significant cardiovascular risk feel well and remain active, yet already have underlying disease. This is why primary prevention - identifying risk before symptoms or events occur - is central to modern cardiology.
Understanding the Key Risk Factors for Heart Disease
The most common drivers of heart disease are well established:
- high blood pressure
- abnormal cholesterol
- diabetes
- smoking
- obesity
- physical inactivity
- poor sleep
- chronic stress
Over time, these factors damage blood vessels and increase the risk of heart attack, stroke, and heart failure. Prevention focuses on early detection and timely intervention.
Physical Activity as One of the Strongest Protective Measures
Physical activity is one of the most effective protective measures. Current
guidelines recommend at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise per week, or 75 minutes of vigorous exercise, spread across the week. Activities such as brisk walking, cycling, swimming, or jogging improve blood pressure, glucose control, lipid levels, and overall cardiovascular fitness.
Blood Pressure Control: A Silent but Critical Target
Blood pressure control is equally important. For most adults, the recommended target is below 130/80 mmHg.
Hypertension is frequently asymptomatic but remains one of the strongest predictors of future cardiovascular events. Early treatment, using lifestyle modification and medication when required, substantially reduces long-term risk.
Lifestyle Habits That Significantly Affect Heart Health
Lifestyle habits should be reviewed honestly. Smoking or vaping significantly accelerates vascular disease. Diets high in processed foods and sugar contribute to obesity and metabolic dysfunction, while inadequate sleep and persistent stress further increase cardiovascular risk.
Recognising Typical Symptoms of Coronary Artery Disease
When symptoms occur, they may suggest underlying coronary artery disease. Typical
angina symptoms include:
- chest tightness
- pressure or heaviness, often triggered by exertion or emotional stress and relieved with rest
- discomfort may radiate to the jaw, neck, shoulder, back, or left arm
- shortness of breath
- sweating
- nausea
Atypical Heart Disease
However, women, older adults, and people with diabetes often present atypically. Symptoms in these groups may include:
- unexplained fatigue
- breathlessness
- indigestion-like discomfort
- nausea
- dizziness
- reduced exercise tolerance rather than classic chest pain
In patients with diabetes, heart disease may be entirely silent. These atypical presentations are a common reason cardiovascular disease is diagnosed late.
Importance of Individualised Cardiovascular Risk Assessment
A comprehensive cardiovascular history is the foundation of risk assessment. This includes family history of premature heart disease, existing medical conditions, medications, lifestyle factors, and in women, pregnancy-related complications. Individualised risk assessment is more informative than age-based screening alone.
Early Detection and Preventive Action in Heart Disease
Several simple, non-invasive tests may be used in the hospital or clinic to refine risk assessment. These include blood tests such as metabolic screening (blood glucose or HbA1c), lipid profile, and lipoprotein(a) to identify inherited risk. A treadmill exercise test can assess exercise capacity, blood pressure response, symptoms, and evidence of inducible ischaemia. A
coronary calcium score detects subclinical coronary atherosclerosis and allows early initiation of drug therapy, such as statins, which reduces future cardiovascular events.
Heart disease is largely preventable. Paying attention early - through awareness, screening, and timely treatment - can prevent serious cardiovascular events before they occur. Take the next step in protecting your heart -
book a cardiovascular screening with
our team today.