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Cancer and cardiovascular disease - non-communicable - OCR GatewayWays of treating cardiovascular disease

The chance of developing a non-communicable disease can be increased or decreased depending upon a person’s lifestyle or the genes they inherit. Two common types are cancer & cardiovascular disease.

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Ways of treating cardiovascular disease

Drugs and surgery can help to control cardiovascular diseases, but so can lifestyle choices.

Lifestyle choices

The chance of developing cardiovascular disease can be reduced by the following lifestyle habits:

  • not smoking
  • exercising regularly
  • maintaining a healthy weight
  • eating a diet low in saturated fat

Statins

Statins are drugs that help to lower cholesterol in the blood. They do this by lowering its production in the .

Statins are prescribed for people with heart disease or who have a high risk of developing it. The drugs need to be taken long-term. levels will rise again if a person stops taking them.

Some patients taking statins experience side-effects such as diarrhoea, headaches and feeling sick.

Statins are not suitable for everyone – they should not be prescribed for people with liver disease, or pregnant or breast feeding women.

Stents

Coronary arteries that are blocked or have become narrow can be stretched open and a inserted to restore and maintain blood flow.

Diagram illustrating how stents work inside arteries

Stents can be used in instances where drugs are less effective, and offer a 'longer term' solution. Stents are made from metal and do not lead to an immune response in the patient.

Around 75,000 operations are carried out each year. Risk factors depend on the patient's:

  • age
  • general health
  • whether they have had a heart attack

The operation is safe as it does not involve surgery, but there is a risk of bleeding, heart attack or .

Coronary artery bypass surgery

In some cases the blockage cannot be treated using a stent so another surgical procedure called a coronary artery bypass graft, or heart bypass, is used instead.

A diagram of the heart, showing the vena cava and the aorta

This involves taking a blood vessel from another part of the body, usually the chest, leg or arm, and attaching it to the coronary artery above and below the narrowing or blockage. This new section of blood vessel is called a graft.