HomeHealth & FitnessWorld Heart Day 2024 | 'Heart attack deaths in 40s & 50s are not new, but they are preventable'

World Heart Day 2024 | 'Heart attack deaths in 40s & 50s are not new, but they are preventable'

How to prevent heart attack deaths in 40s and 50s: Some basic health checks like a lipid profile, seeing a doctor when you're feeling uneasy or ill and avoiding sudden changes like a strenuous exercise routine when you are not used to working out can all help.

September 29, 2024 / 13:29 IST
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If you are in your 40s and you haven't been working out regularly, increase the intensity and time for exercise incrementally. Never work out to the point of exhaustion because fitness should not become another point to stress over, recommends heart transplant surgeon Dr Mukesh Goel. (Image by Ollivves via Pexels)
If you are in your 40s and you haven't been working out regularly, increase the intensity and time for exercise incrementally. Never work out to the point of exhaustion because fitness should not become another point to stress over, recommends heart transplant surgeon Dr Mukesh Goel. (Image by Ollivves via Pexels)

Heart attacks can occur when a piece of cholesterol plaque lining the arteries breaks off, a blood clot forms around it and this clot blocks a major artery to the heart. Now, cholesterol plaque starts building up in our arteries from the age of 10-11. "It's called fatty streaks at this age because these are very thin deposits," explains Mukesh Goel, senior consultant, cardiothoracic, heart and lung transplant surgery, Indraprastha Apollo Hospitals.

This is the normal course of events, and when someone is active from childhood to their adult years, that minimizes their risk of developing ischemic heart disease - the top cause of death in any age group worldwide. Of course, the cholesterol produced in our liver has a number of uses, including making vitamin D, hormones, bile acids and even the walls of our body cells. The problem arises when there is so much excess cholesterol deposited on the artery walls that it causes narrowing of blood vessels, poses the risk of a blocked artery or of pieces of plaque breaking away to cause arterial blockages.

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"Heart attacks in the 40s and 50s are nothing new," explains Dr. Goel. "Any way India is the diabetes capital of the world." High blood sugar and high blood pressure, when unchecked, also affect the health of our arteries.

Dr Goel adds that while there has been an upward trend of younger people getting cardiovascular diseases (CAD), Indians aged 40 and above have always been prone to heart disease. This is partly due to genetics - Asians, as a race, have higher incidence of heart disease - and partly due to lifestyle, including, Dr Goel warns, a sudden shift from a no-exercise, sedentary lifestyle to weekend-warrior mode and working out to the point of exhaustion.