Predicting coronary risk

September 8, 2004

With all the recent attention on coronary artery disease, comes this article on how heart disease sneaks up on many people:

Heart disease, which kills about half a million Americans each year, can take decades to develop. Yet it still catches people by surprise, especially women, who often regard it as a manÂ’s disease. Half the time, a heart attack is the first sign of trouble.

One way to calculate risk is a risk assessment tool based on the Framingham Heart Study (known as the Framingham risk score). Based on cardiac risk factors (i.e. blood pressure, cholesterol and smoking), it calculates a 10-year risk of having a heart attack or coronary death. If the 10-year risk is greater than 20 percent, it will have an affect on the goal LDL (”bad cholesterol”) level.



Related posts:

  1. More Russert analysis
  2. How did Michael Jackson die, and the medicine behind sudden cardiac death
  3. Summarizing the Russert case
  4. Why doctors should reconsider ordering a CRP to screen patients for heart disease
  5. Obesity and heart attacks
  6. The mirage of HDL cholesterol
  7. Female vs male physicians


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