Heart Health
Coronary Artery Disease Assessment

Coronary artery disease (CAD) is the most common type of heart disease. It is the leading cause of death in the United States in both men and women. Determine your risk for developing CAD using this assessment tool.

Heart Disease Risk Quiz

Knowing what causes heart disease and how you can prevent it can help you live a healthier, longer life.

What is Coronary Artery Disease?
Understanding Coronary Artery Disease (CAD)

To understand coronary artery disease (CAD), you need to know how your heart works. Your heart is a muscle that pumps blood throughout your body. To work right, your heart needs a steady supply of oxygen. It gets this oxygen from blood supplied by the coronary arteries.

What You Need to Know About Coronary Artery Disease

If an artery narrows too much, you can feel chest pain. A heart attack occurs if an artery closes all the way or narrows so much that a blood clot blocks the blood flow.

Coronary Artery Disease

The most common form of heart disease is atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries. Cholesterol joins with calcium and scar tissue and builds up in the arteries. When cholesterol levels are too high, the circulatory system becomes choked—and the result is a dam of plaque that narrows the channels the blood flows through.

Cardiovascular Terms to Know

Here are important medical terms to know about your condition.

Risk Factors for Coronary Artery Disease
Risk Factors for Heart Disease

Some risk factors for heart disease are beyond your control, but others, such as smoking or high blood pressure, you can do something about.

Heart Luck: Family History Is Important

If your father or mother has heart disease, that doesn't mean you will automatically develop it, too. It's true that you are more likely to get it than someone who does not have a family history of heart disease, but you can take steps to try to prevent it.

Metabolic Syndrome: Lowering Your Heart Disease Risk

Control your blood pressure, keep your cholesterol in check, and take your medicine as prescribed.

Heed the Warning of Prehypertension

In many cases, the progression to high blood pressure occurs within four years of being diagnosed with prehypertension.

How Your Heart Works
How Your Heart Works

Your heart is a pumping muscle that works nonstop to keep your body supplied with oxygen-rich blood. Signals from the heart’s electrical system set the speed and pattern of the pump’s rhythm. Valves keep the blood moving in one direction, through the heart’s four chambers.

Understanding Circulation

Nonstop flow of blood from the heart to the body and back to the heart again is called circulation. Blood vessels are hollow muscular tubes that carry blood throughout your body, much like pipes circulate water in your home.

Your Heart's Electrical System

The heart has a special system that creates and sends electrical signals. First, signals tell the atria to squeeze. This moves blood to the ventricles. Next, signals tell the ventricles to squeeze. This moves blood to the lungs and body.

Reading Room
Legs Aid Heart in Pumping Blood

Your heart pumps blood through 60,000 miles of vessels. But it gets help in this huge task from your body's other muscles, especially those in the legs.

Blood Vessels: Your Internal Superhighway

Every minute of every day, millions of blood cells trek through about 60,000 miles of blood vessels -- enough to stretch from New York City to San Francisco 23 times -- delivering oxygen and nutrients to every tissue. Your cardiovascular system includes your heart and two basic kinds of blood vessels: arteries and veins.

Target Your Heart Rate for Better Health

By knowing your heart rate, you can gauge how fit you are and whether you're working out at a moderate pace.

Clinical Guidelines for Good Heart Care

As a patient, understanding the basics of the guidelines can help you take a more active role in your treatment.

Heart Disease: Terms to Know

A short glossary of medical terms associated with heart disease.

Understanding Heart Surgery

It’s great if you can keep your heart healthy—by not smoking, eating a healthy diet, and getting regular physical activity. But what if you end up needing heart surgery? What should you know about the procedure?

Glossary of Terms (Cardiovascular)

Information and definitions on everything from angina to ventricles.

Heart Attack Treatment Options

Not everyone who has had a heart attack needs open-heart surgery, such as a bypass operation.