If your question is true or false your answer is: False :)
Cardiovascular disease can result from your genes and/or your environment (diet, etc), so, proper diet and exercise alone cannot entirely prevent disease. However, it can greatly lower your risk of getting it and/or prevent its symptoms from negatively affecting your life.
Cardiovascular disease can be attributed to this uncontrollable risk factor:
high blood pressure , overweight ,smoking ,
Elderly, cigarette smoking obese people have a high risk of cardiovascular disease.
Fructose intake has been correlated with higher levels of plasma triglycerols and smaller LDL particle size, which are risk factors which have been correlated with cardiovascular disease. However, there are many factors of factors that can be correlated in the same way, so such studies cannot demonstrate which of them, if any, have a causal relationship with cardiovascular disease. It has been shown that fructose and glucose are metabolized differently, and that fructose intake has a higher correlation with certain cardiovascular risk factors than glucose.
The only uncontrollable factors for cardiovascular disease, like many diseases, are genetic background and age. Most other factors are able to be affected by lifestyle changes in diet/activity/stress habits, as well as by pharmacologic and surgical treatments.
Anne-Marie Waters has written: 'Risk factors for cardiovascular disease'
Among the cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors, age is one that cannot be changed. While many risk factors such as high blood pressure, cholesterol levels, smoking, and physical inactivity can be modified through lifestyle changes and medical intervention, aging is a natural, unavoidable process. Other unmodifiable risk factors include genetics and family history of heart disease.
A smoker's risk of heart attack, or myocardial infarction, is four times the risk of nonsmokers. Smokers also have four times the risk of cardiovascular disease in general.
Risk factors for getting the disease or risk factors if you already have the disease?
Karla L. Roehrig has written: 'Risk factors and disease prevention' -- subject(s): Cancer, Cardiovascular system, Diseases, Preventive Medicine, Risk factors
Being inactive is a _____ for cardiovascular diseases. Answer: Primary risk factor !
Stan Bennett has written: 'Outline of a national monitoring system for cardiovascular disease' -- subject(s): Diseases, Cardiovascular system, Health surveys, Risk factors