Daily News Alert
Enter your email below.





Hot Stories
Recent Stories

What's Your Heart's Real Age? Take This Test to Find Out and Discover How Long You Can Expect to Live For

Posted by Odinaka on Fri 30th Sep, 2016 - tori.ng

Are you worried your heart is much older than you are and that you're on the verge of having a heart attack? Then you'll find this article extremely helpful and educating.

Produced by NHS Choices and the British Heart Foundation, the updated tool offers advice and
intervention to help lower the heart's age and keep you alive for longer
 
Well a test can estimate the age of your ticker, as well as revealing how long you can expect to live without having a heart attack or a stroke.
 
But a new update to the 16-question tool offers advice and interventions to help lower the vital organ's age and keep you alive for longer.  
 
Produced by NHS Choices and the British Heart Foundation, the Heart Age Tool asks for information about your age, gender, height and weight.
 
It also seeks to know where you live, whether you're an active smoker and your ethnicity - all factors that impact the risk of having a heart attack or stroke. 
 
The free tool - initially launched last year - also scours for information about your cholesterol levels, blood pressure and whether or not you have any other conditions that increase your risk. 
 
It is designed to work on people aged 30 or older who have not already been diagnosed with cardiovascular disease. 
 
The updated tool comes after new research found four in five people have hearts much older than they are due to a poor lifestyle.
 
In the worst cases, men and women in their mid-40s had hearts typical of 60-year-olds, scientists found.
 
A worrying 89 per cent of men below 40 had unhealthy hearts, compared with just 41 per cent of women, researchers discovered.
 
 
Johanna Ralston of the World Heart Federation said: ‘The Heart Age Tool is an extremely useful wake-up call for people to implement those simple lifestyle changes that can improve their heart age and their wellbeing.’
 
Jamie Waterall of Public Health England said: ‘Even though you may not have symptoms, having a heart age higher than your own age indicates an increased risk of serious illness.
 
‘The tool gives an immediate indication of a person’s potential risk and what they can start doing to reduce it. For people over 40, the NHS Health Check presents an invaluable opportunity to discuss your heart health with a professional.’ 
 
Culled from: Dailymail UK


Top Stories
Popular Stories


Stories from this Category
Recent Stories