Commentary - (2022) Volume 11, Issue 4

Preventive Cardiovascular Practice in Improving Cardiovascular Health
Antonio M Olsson*
 
Department of Cardiology, University Baptist Medical Center, North Carolina, USA
 
*Correspondence: Antonio M Olsson, Department of Cardiology, University Baptist Medical Center, North Carolina, USA, Email:

Received: 05-Apr-2022, Manuscript No. CPO-22-16565; Editor assigned: 08-Apr-2022, Pre QC No. CPO-22-16565 (PQ); Reviewed: 22-Apr-2022, QC No. CPO-22-16565; Revised: 29-Apr-2022, Manuscript No. CPO-22-16565 (R); Published: 06-May-2022, DOI: 10.35248/2329-6607.22.11.278

Description

Preventive cardiology can help you reduce your risk of heart disease by identifying risk factors associated with the disease and providing you with the advice and care you need to address these problems and improve your health. Complications of right-sided heart failure can include a discomfort or pressure in the chest, jaw, or neck, or pressure due to lack of blood flow to the heart.

Atrial fibrillation

This irregular heartbeat can increase your risk of stroke and blood clot formation. Preventive cardiology is a subspecialty that focuses on reducing the risk of developing heart disease and first heart attack or stroke in patients, and preventing further problems in people who already have cardiovascular disease.

Preventive cardiology is concerned with the clinical and preventive medical practice of cardiovascular disease in humans at the individual and population levels. The goal of preventive cardiology is to prevent cardiovascular disease and reduce the burden of cardiovascular disease in the population and improve the quality of life and life expectancy of people with cardiovascular disease. In the clinical context, it mainly focuses on patients with atherosclerotic disease, patients at high risk of developing multifactorial cardiovascular disease. Traditionally, physicians have focused more on clinical practice with a specific disease. Doctors also play a role in preventive practice in response to the adage "prevention is better than cure". In addition, many hospitals have established preventive cardiology clinics or cardiovascular prevention programs in the United States and other countries. Most countries have a professional association for preventive cardiology, which is an important forum for health professionals and policy makers to work together to control and prevent cardiovascular disease.

The term "Acute Heart Failure" (AHF) describes a rapid onset of symptoms and/or signs of Heart Failure (HF). This is a lifethreatening medical condition that requires urgent evaluation and treatment, often resulting in urgent hospitalization. This description implies a very complex and clinically difficult scenario, which remains one of the major challenges in cardiovascular practice despite decades of rigorous research and strongly address both the cause of AHF and its treatment.

Primary prevention

Aims to prevent heart disease before an event such as a heart attack, stroke, or cardiovascular surgery is needed.

Secondary prevention

It is aimed at early detection of coronary heart disease and organization of active control of risk factors and medications, if necessary.

Tertiary prevention

This works for an individual after they have experienced an event such as heart or blood vessel surgery, angioplasty, or a heart attack, to stop the progression of cardiovascular disease.

Safe Health's comprehensive, personalized approach to lifestyle and health management can slow the progression of cardiovascular disease and reduce the risk of heart attack, stroke, and angioplasty or bypass surgery demand in the future.

A preventive intervention to reduce the risk of Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) is an easy to understand but difficult to put into practice. Key methods for maintaining heart health include quitting or avoiding smoking, eating carefully, managing your weight, exercising regularly, managing stress, and regularly checking your blood sugar and cholesterol levels and blood pressure. Unless we step up and strengthen strategies to manage risk factors and comorbidities, CVD will continue to be the dominant force controlling our life span. Several concerted efforts are needed to significantly improve this prediction, the most important of which is the creation of a dedicated subspecialty aimed at preventing CVD. Once preventive cardiology is developed as a single subspecialty of cardiovascular medicine, the medical community and the general public will need to be aware of the service's existence and use it regularly for evaluation risk In addition, hospitals will need to integrate this service and make it as popular as general cardiology or general endocrinology clinics. For 50% of people with heart disease, a heart attack is the first symptom. That's definitely not the best way to find out! Unfortunately, 30% to 50% of these people do not survive a heart attack. They works for an individual after they have experienced an event such as heart or blood vessel surgery, angioplasty, or a heart attack, to stop the progression of cardiovascular disease.

Safe Health's comprehensive, personalized approach to lifestyle and health management can slow the progression of cardiovascular disease and reduce the risk of heart attack, stroke, and angioplasty or bypass surgery demand in the future.

Preventive interventions to reduce the risk of Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) are an easy to understand but difficult to put into practice. Key methods for maintaining heart health include quitting or avoiding smoking, eating carefully, managing your weight, exercising regularly, managing stress, and regularly checking your blood sugar and cholesterol levels and blood pressure. Unless we step up and strengthen strategies to manage risk factors and comorbidities, CVD will continue to be the dominant force controlling our life span. Several concerted efforts are needed to significantly improve this prediction, the most important of which is the creation of a dedicated subspecialty aimed at preventing CVD.

Once preventive cardiology is developed as a single subspecialty of cardiovascular medicine, the medical community and the general public will need to be aware of the service's existence and use it regularly for evaluation risk In addition, hospitals will need to integrate this service and make it as popular as general cardiology or general endocrinology clinics. For 50% of people with heart disease, a heart attack is the first symptom. That's definitely not the best way to find out! Unfortunately, 30% to 50% of these people do not survive a heart attack.

Citation: Olsson AM (2022) Preventive Cardiovascular Practice in Improving Cardiovascular Health. Cardiovasc Pharm. 11:278.

Copyright: © 2022 Olsson AM. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.