Heart failure risk more than doubled in men who sat for at least five hours a day and got little exercise compared to men who were very physically active and sat for two hours or less a day.
Not exact matches
Part - funded by the British
Heart Foundation, the study shows that drinking more alcohol is associated with a higher risk of stroke, fatal aneurysm, heart failure and d
Heart Foundation, the study shows that drinking
more alcohol is associated with a higher
risk of stroke, fatal aneurysm,
heart failure and d
heart failure and death.
A major
risk factor of
heart failure is high blood pressure, or hypertension, which is
more common among African - Americans.
Short total reproductive duration was associated with an increased
risk of
heart failure, which was found to be related to an earlier age at menopause and was
more pronounced in women who experienced natural, rather than surgical, menopause.
Having
more children was not associated with
heart failure risk.
This loss means that
more blood stays in the
heart, and ultimately increases a person's
risk of
heart failure.
«Exercising
more, sitting less reduces
heart failure risk in men.»
Upon analyzing the different types of activities, certain types of physical activity were associated with reduced
risk of
heart failure such as walking and bicycling or exercising
more than one hour per week.
While the study suggests both low and high levels of physical activity, compared to
more moderate levels, could increase the
risk of
heart failure in men, study authors cautioned that the link between physical activity and
heart disease is not fully understood.
• Systolic blood pressure levels above 140 mmHg were linked with higher
risks of coronary
heart disease, stroke, kidney
failure, and death in patients with CKD of all ages, but the magnitude of these associations diminished with
more advanced age.
An analysis of
more than 17,000 adults has found that coffee drinkers have a 7 per cent lower
risk of developing
heart failure for every cup of coffee they consume per week.
(2) The result is that women's
risk factors are left untreated, leaving them
more vulnerable to
heart attack,
heart failure and sudden cardiac death when the protection fades after menopause.»
«This is significant to stroke care because many stroke
risk factors — such as high blood pressure,
heart failure, coronary artery disease — are
more common in old age.
«It's a much
more powerful message, when you're talking to patients in their 30s or 40s, to say that they will be able to live 11 to 13 years longer without
heart failure if they can avoid developing these three
risk factors now.»
«If patients know they have received a drug treatment that might increase their
risk of
heart failure, it's even
more important to take care of the aspects of their life that they can control to reduce their
risk as much as possible and to work with their medical care team to detect issues as early as possible,» Larsen said.
High salt intake is associated with a doubled
risk of
heart failure, according to a 12 - year study in
more than 4,000 people presented today at ESC Congress.
«People who consumed
more than 13.7 grams of salt daily had a two times higher
risk of
heart failure compared to those consuming less than 6.8 grams,» he continued.
While better medical care and timely management of
heart attacks have decreased the number of early deaths, survivors face an increased
risk of chronic
heart failure as they develop even
more scarring.
Obesity, hypertension and diabetes are all important and independent
risk factors for
heart failure and may cause
more adverse impairment of myocardial metabolism in women compared with men (302, 303).
They cause higher blood pressure and
more difficulty delivering adequate blood and oxygen to our body, putting us at
risk for
heart attack, stroke, organ
failure and
more.
TUESDAY, November 22, 2011 (Health.com)-- People with
heart disease may increase their
risk of
heart attack, stroke,
heart failure, and dying from
heart - related causes even
more if they consume a diet high in sodium, according to a new study that followed nearly 30,000 people for
more than four years.
Keeping the
risks in perspective «For people with preexisting medical problems, like congestive
heart failure or renal insufficiency, these drugs are
more likely to cause side effects,» says Dr. Kolasinski.
People with
heart disease may increase their
risk of
heart attack, stroke,
heart failure, and dying from
heart - related causes even
more if they consume a diet high in sodium, according to a new study that followed nearly 30,000 people for
more than four years.
FRIDAY, May 18, 2018 (HealthDay News)-- Attention, middle - age couch potatoes: There's still time to lower your
risk of
heart failure, a condition affecting
more than 5 million Americans.
Recent studies have shown that belly fat is not metabolically inert, but rather actively promotes the secretion of many powerful hormones that not only make it
more difficult to lose body weight, but also promote systemic inflammation that raises the
risk for
heart failure, cardiovascular diseases and DNA aberrations that help cancer cells to grow and metastasize.
Of course there are many
more symptoms and many of the
more serious ones include
risk of
heart failure and stroke due to higher cholesterol levels and
heart issues.
Being overweight or obese significantly raises your
risk of
heart failure, high blood pressure, diabetes and many
more illnesses.
``...
more than 100 grams [4 ounces in one week] of carnitine, lecithin, or choline, or any combination of them, changed the way your gut bacteria metabolized those themselves to produce two things, butyl butane, which in the long term causes kidney disease and kidney
failure, and TMA which you absorb and then the liver converts to TMAO which is a greater
risk for inflammation and all things that go along with inflammation,
heart disease, stroke, memory loss, impotence, decaying orgasm quality, wrinkling, cancer, and brain rot.»
But veterinarians who believe that brachycephalic dogs suffer
more from
heart issues suggest that a deficiency of oxygen over time (chronic hypoxia) causes blood channels in the lungs to narrow (pulmonary vasoconstriction) which then leads to increased blood pressure within the
heart (pulmonary hypertension), a known
risk for
heart failure.