
Dr. Roger Blumenthal and his cardiovascular team at Johns Hopkins offer guidelines to help you maintain a healthy heart.
You can modify or treat most of the risk factors associated with a heart attack or stroke. Here is an easy-to-remember checklist of primary prevention measures for people without symptoms of (a history of) coronary heart disease (CHD).
- Heart Attack Prevention Tip #1: Take low-dose aspirin.
Goal: Low-dose aspirin (75 to 162 mg per day) for people at elevated risk for a heart attack. Not recommended for some people, so be sure to consult with a physician before starting aspirin therapy.Heart Attack Prevention Tip #2: Keep your blood pressure under control.
Goal: <140/90 mm Hg (optimal is <120/80 mm Hg); <130/80 mm Hg for people with diabetes or kidney disease. If you cannot reach this goal after three to six months of lifestyle changes, you may benefit from medication to prevent a heart attack.Heart Attack Prevention Tip #3: Lower your cholesterol. Goal: Total cholesterol <200 mg/dL; LDL cholesterol <160 for people with no more than one risk factor for a heart attack; LDL <130 for those with two or more risk factors; LDL <100 (with an optional goal of <70) for some people with two or more risk factors as well as for those with diabetes, history of stroke or aortic aneurysm, peripheral arterial disease, or coronary heart disease; HDL >40 for men and HDL> 50 for women (and preferably >60 for both men and women); triglycerides <150. If you cannot reach LDL goal after three to nine months of lifestyle changes, consider drug therapy to lower LDL. Exercise, improvements in diet, and quitting smoking can help meet HDL goals.
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