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Hearts & Arteries

National Institutes of Health
Hearts & Arteries, NIH Publication Number 94-3738


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Hearts & Arteries


Age is the major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Heart disease and stroke rise steeply after age 65, accounting for more than 40 percent of all deaths among people age 65 to 74 and almost 60 percent at age 85 and above. People age 65 and over are much more likely than younger people to suffer a heart attack, to have a stroke, and to develop coronary heart disease and high blood pressure leading to heart failure. Cardiovascular diseases are also major causes of disability, limiting the activity and eroding the quality of life of millions of older people each year. Their cost to the Nation is in the billions.

To understand why aging is so closely linked to cardiovascular disease, and ultimately to understand the causes and cures for this group of diseases, it is essential to understand what is happening in the heart and arteries during normal aging-aging in the absence of disease. This understanding has moved forward dramatically in the last 20 years. The purpose of this book is to tell the story of this progress, describe some of the most important findings, and give a sense of what may lie ahead.

Research on the aging heart and blood vessels takes place at several different research centers. A great deal of this work is centered in the Laboratory of Cardiovascular Science at the National Institute on Aging (NIA). Many of the researchers mentioned in the following pages work in or with this laboratory. Some served as post-doctoral fellows or visiting scientists at NIA; some are funded by the Institute. Others have worked at or been funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI). NIA and NHLBI are two of 17 institutes at the National Institutes of Health, and their work is complementary. NIA research focuses on the effects of aging on the heart, blood vessels, and other parts of the body, while NHLBI works to understand the diseases and risk factors that affect the heart and blood vessels.
Both perspectives are bringing us closer to the possibility that heart disease and stroke will someday be defeated. Research on the basic biology of the aging cardiovascular system gives hope that we as a Nation need not accept the high rates of death and disability and the enormous health care costs imposed by cardiovascular disease among older people in our society.

Richard J. Hodes, M.D.
Director
National Institute on Aging

 

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