Cardiovascular Health in Men: Prevention and Screening
Why Men's Heart Disease Risk Differs
Men develop heart disease 7-10 years earlier than women, on average. Testosterone may have protective effects in women pre-menopause. Additionally:
- Men are more likely to have traditional risk factors
- Men often delay seeking medical attention
- Metabolic syndrome (common in men) significantly increases risk
Men's Risk Factors
Beyond traditional factors like high blood pressure and cholesterol, men particularly experience:
- Metabolic syndrome (central obesity, high triglycerides, insulin resistance)
- Sleep apnea
- High stress occupations
- Higher smoking rates historically
Screening by Age
20-39 years: Discuss cardiovascular health and risk factors with healthcare provider. No routine screening needed unless risk factors present.
40-49 years: Blood pressure and lipid screening recommended. Consider 10-year cardiovascular risk assessment.
50+ years: Regular blood pressure monitoring, lipid panels every 4-6 years, consider additional testing based on risk factors.
Preventive Approach
Rather than waiting for disease development, focus on modifiable factors:
- Maintain healthy weight
- Exercise regularly (150+ minutes weekly)
- Avoid smoking
- Manage stress
- Adopt heart-healthy diet (Mediterranean or DASH pattern)
- Manage blood pressure and cholesterol
- Moderate alcohol consumption
Work and Heart Health
High-stress work environments increase cardiovascular risk. Stress management techniques and maintaining work-life balance are crucial. Those with demanding jobs benefit particularly from regular exercise and good sleep.
Depression and Heart Health
Men have higher cardiovascular mortality after depression diagnosis. Recognizing and treating depression is important for overall health.
Screening Conversations
At healthcare visits, specifically discuss cardiovascular risk and screening recommendations appropriate for your age and risk factors. Don't assume screening will be offered—ask.