Preventing Deadly Cardiovascular Disease in Patients with Diabetes

Living with diabetes is difficult enough. But adults with diabetes face a 2-4 times greater chance of cardiovascular disease than of a person without diabetes. Patients with diabetes undergo a higher rate of Coronary Artery Bypass surgeries than non-diabetics. Nearly 70% of adults with diabetes age 65 and older die of some form of cardiovascular disease.

“Diabetes and its effect on the body place a person at high risk of stroke, heart attack, coronary artery disease, peripheral arterial disease and congestive heart failure,” says McLeod Cardiologist, Dr. Dennis Lang. “We also know that with the appropriate treatment and lifestyle changes those risks can be controlled and reduced.”

FIRST STEPS
Among the fist steps: determine if you need cardiac testing. The American College of Cardiology has these indications for diabetic patients:

  • Do you have cardiac symptoms?
  • Has a resting Electrocardiogram Test suggested you have blocked arteries or an impending heart attack?
  • Do you have Peripheral Arterial Disease or Carotid Artery Disease?
  • Are you over age 35 with a sedentary lifestyle but plan to begin an exercise program?
  • Do you have two or more of the following risk factors: high cholesterol, high blood pressure, diabetes, smoke or family history of coronary artery disease?

NEXT STEP
If your testing shows you are at increased risk, your cardiologist may begin you with these types of medications – among other drugs:

  • Aspirin
  • Beta-blockers to reduce your blood pressure by blocking adrenaline
  • ACE Inhibitors, which can enlarge blood vessels and reduce blood pressure
  • Medications to reduce fat production and lower your cholesterol

Your cardiologist will probably also recommend that you increase your physical activity, lose weight and quit smoking.

HOW DOES TREATMENT HELP
Losing weight and following a healthier diet (less fried foods, more fruit and vegetables) will improve your diabetes status. Diabetes is a chronic – meaning a long-lasting, ongoing – disease. So, although you may never be rid of it, you can improve your risk of heart and vascular disease in the following ways:

  • Controlling your blood glucose can reduce your risk of cardiovascular disease by as much as 50%, reduce the risk of a heart attack by 42% and reduce the risk of cardiovascular-related death by 57%.
  • Reducing lipids – the fat-like substance in your blood – can reduce cardiovascular complications by 20%-50%.

ACTIONS YOU CAN TAKE
Work with your personal physician on controlling your diabetes. See a cardiologist for further testing if you have any of the five indications in the “First Steps” section in this article.

Find a Cardiologist near you.

Sources include: McLeod Health, Journal of the American Medical Association, Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing, British Columbia Medical Journal, World Heart Federation, American Heart Association, American Diabetes Association, American College of Cardiology