You can lower your risk of heart disease even if it runs in your family.
Even though you cannot change your genetic makeup, knowing your family history can help reduce your risk of developing health problems.
Simple tips, from getting enough sleep to knowing your family history, can help you improve your heart health.
You might see a cardiologist if you have a family history of heart disease, or to make sure any heart-related problems, such as high blood pressure, are under control
Risk factors for hypertension include family history, obesity and tobacco. Premier Health Specialists’ Dr. Srikanth Sadhu talks more about risk factors for h...
Most risk factors for a stroke are well known. Some of the most common examples are high blood pressure, elevated cholesterol, diabetes, inactivity, smoking, a prior stroke and family history
According to the Migraine Research Foundation, approximately 12 percent of people in the U.S. suffer from migraines, with nearly 90 percent of migraine sufferers having a family history of migraines. They are also more common in women than men.
Women in our community are desperately in need of new tools to take care of their health. More women are gaining weight. More women are getting cancer. More ...
Heart Attack Risk Factors address the two types of risk factors associated with heart attacks, factors that a person can control and factors they cannot. Kno...
A heart disease survivor herself, Carol explains why women unintentionally ignore their heart symptoms. Historically, common heart disease signs are known fo...
Cardiovascular disease (CV) is the number one killer in the Western world. But it doesn’t need to be. The truth is that more than 75 percent of cases of hear...
What if you need to advocate for yourself - lipedema is a disease! Lipedema is a disease that is little known and under recognized by doctors. Learning to ad...
Is there a test to determine whether you will become afflicted with Alzheimer's Disease? Dr. Howard Fillit of the Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation gives...
Cholesterol plays an important role in our bodies and is a risk factor for heart disease as it is produced by both our body and the foods we eat. There are b...
You can prevent heart disease by living a heart-healthy lifestyle. Quit smoking, manage stress, exercise for thirty minutes every day, if you can. Eat a diet...
I am your host, Dr. Daniel Cameron. I appreciate the opportunity to share with you what I have seen in my practice. I have seen Lyme disease patients in my p...
Banner Health's Dr. Brian Lyle describes how CRP (C-reactive protein) and homocysteine inflammation markers can help define someone's risk for coronary arter...
Dr. Traci Kiernan talks about some of the common misconceptions of Type II Diabetes, and offers some tips regarding this chronic disease.
Watch this video for helpful advice on ways to prevent heart disease from Dr. Harding, Internal Medicine/Pediatrics.