Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease: What’s the Link?
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a complication and cause of premature death among people with
diabetes. Unfortunately, many people with diabetes do not understand the risk of cardiovascular disease or what they can do to help prevent it.
Risk of Cardiovascular Disease
- Coronary artery disease and heart attacks
- Cerebrovascular disease and stroke
- Peripheral artery disease and claudication (pain with walking)
Why Is There a Risk?
- Their platelets have an added tendency to clump together leading to clotting problems and poor blood flow.
- They have higher rates of high blood pressure and obesity.
- They tend to have unfavorable lipid profiles, particularly increased LDL or “bad” cholesterol; low levels of HDL, or “good” cholesterol; and increased levels of triglycerides.
Who Are the High-risk Groups?
- People with a family history of diabetes
- Overweight and obese people, especially extra weight around the waist
- Older people
- Special populations
- African Americans
- Hispanic/Latino Americans
- American Indians
- Asian Americans
- Pacific Islanders
Management of Diabetes
- Blood glucose is measured with the hemoglobin A1C test. The recommended goal for this test is a reading of less than 7%.
- Blood pressure should be less than 130/80 mmHg.
- LDL cholesterol should be less than 100 mg/dl (2.6 mmol/L).
- Triglycerides should be under 150 mg/dL.
- For men, HDL (good) cholesterol should be above 40 mg/dL; for women, it should be over 50 mg/dL.
How Do You Lower the Risk?
- Get involved in treatment decisions with your healthcare team.
- Be actively involved in the management of your disease.
- Set lifestyle goals.
- Become well-educated about diabetes and CVD.
- Eat a healthy diet that’s low in saturated fat and cholesterol and low in sodium.
- Eat more fiber.
- Get at least 30-60 minutes of physical activity on most days of the week.
- Diligently control your blood glucose, cholesterol, and blood pressure with and without medications.
- Ask about aspirin therapy for CVD prevention.
- If you smoke, quit. If you need help quitting, talk to your doctor.
RESOURCES
American Diabetes Association http://www.diabetes.org/
National Diabetes Education Program http://ndep.nih.gov/
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases http://www.niddk.nih.gov/
CANADIAN RESOURCES
Canadian Diabetes Association http://www.diabetes.ca/
Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada http://ww2.heartandstroke.ca/
References
Heart disease. American Diabetes Association website. Available at: http://www.diabetes.org/living-with-diabetes/complications/heart-disease/. Accessed June 12, 2012.
The link between diabetes and cardiovascular disease. National Diabetes Education Program website. Available at: http://ndep.nih.gov/media/CVD%5FFactSheet.pdf. Updated February 2007. Accessed June 12, 2012.
Diabetes, heart disease, and stroke. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases website. Available at: http://diabetes.niddk.nih.gov/dm/pubs/stroke/index.aspx. Updated December 6, 2011. Accessed June 18, 2012.