Skip to content

Prävention & Vorsorge

Cardiovascular prevention from age 35

Identify risk factors, protect heart health, live longer

Cardiovascular diseases are preventable. Age 35 is the ideal time to lay the foundation for a healthy heart. Learn about the most important risk factors and how you can influence them through lifestyle and regular checkups.

In short, explained

  • Main risk factors: high blood pressure, elevated blood lipids, diabetes, smoking, obesity
  • Diet: Mediterranean – vegetables, olive oil, fish, nuts, little salt
  • Exercise: 150 min/week moderate – lowers blood pressure like a medication
  • Smoking: The most important avoidable factor – quitting is always worthwhile.
  • Monitoring: Regularly check blood pressure, cholesterol, and blood sugar.
  • Prevention: 80% of heart attacks are preventable through lifestyle.

Why cardiovascular prevention is so important

Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death in Germany – accounting for approximately 40 percent of all deaths. That's more than cancer, respiratory diseases, and accidents combined. Heart attack, stroke, heart failure, peripheral arterial disease – these diagnoses fundamentally change lives and often seem to come out of nowhere. The neighbor who seemed perfectly healthy yesterday is in intensive care today. The colleague who always appeared to be in excellent physical condition suddenly has a heart attack. Almost everyone knows these stories, and they are frightening.

The truth is, however, that most cardiovascular events develop over years, sometimes decades. They can not only be delayed through prevention, but in many cases completely avoided. Scientists estimate that up to 80 percent of all heart attacks and strokes could be prevented through lifestyle modifications. This is a remarkable figure that gives hope – but also places a responsibility on our shoulders.

The 35th year of life as a turning point

From the age of 35, statutory health insurance recommends regular check-ups, and for good reason. At this age, risk factors begin to manifest, which can lead to vascular damage over decades. Blood pressure, which was optimal at 25, gradually rises. Blood lipid levels change. The first few pounds gained after university, which one wanted to "get rid of quickly," have stubbornly settled in. The stressful job takes its toll. These changes happen slowly, imperceptibly, and that's precisely what makes them so dangerous.

The insidious nature of arteriosclerosis

Arteriosclerosis – the calcification and hardening of the blood vessels – develops gradually over decades. Even in twenty-year-olds, the first fatty deposits can be detected in the vessel walls. Over time, these become plaques that narrow the vessel lumen and reduce the elasticity of the arteries. The insidious thing about it is that this process causes no symptoms for a long time. You feel nothing as deposits slowly form in your coronary arteries. You feel fine while your blood pressure rises imperceptibly. Only when the damage is already advanced – when a vessel has narrowed critically or a plaque ruptures and forms a clot – do symptoms appear: chest pain, shortness of breath, dizziness. Or even more dramatically: a sudden heart attack, a stroke, which changes your life in an instant.

Prevention means taking action before it gets to that point.

This is precisely the key to cardiovascular prevention: it's about taking action before symptoms appear, before the damage becomes apparent. It's about identifying and influencing risk factors while they are still modifiable. The good news is that the most important risk factors can be modified through lifestyle. Diet, exercise, quitting smoking, stress management, weight control – all these factors are within your control. This guide shows you evidence-based strategies for a healthy heart, scientifically sound and practically applicable. From age 35 – and beyond.

Understanding the risk factors

To effectively prevent cardiovascular disease, you first need to understand the risk factors that contribute to its development. In medicine, a distinction is made between non-modifiable and modifiable risk factors. While you can't change some of them, you can control most of them – and that's the good news.

The factors that cannot be influenced

Let's start with the factors you can't change. Age is the strongest risk factor of all – with each decade of life, the risk of cardiovascular disease increases. In men, it rises significantly from around age 40, and in women about ten years later. This is because blood vessels lose elasticity over time, and deposits accumulate over the years. Gender also plays a role: statistically, men develop the disease earlier and more frequently. Women have some protection from estrogen until menopause, after which this protection diminishes – at which point the risks become more similar. Finally, genetics is a factor. If close relatives – parents or siblings – developed cardiovascular disease at a young age (men before 55, women before 65), your own risk is increased. You can't change this family history, but you can take it as a warning and focus even more diligently on the factors you can influence.

High blood pressure – The silent killer

High blood pressure is the most important modifiable risk factor for cardiovascular disease and, at the same time, one of the most insidious. It causes no symptoms for years, while continuously damaging the blood vessel walls and overloading the heart. Persistently elevated pressure damages the delicate endothelium, the inner lining of the blood vessels, and promotes the development of arteriosclerosis. The heart has to pump against the increased resistance and thickens in the process – initially as an adaptation, but ultimately as damage. Optimal blood pressure is below 120/80 mmHg. Blood pressure above 140/90 mmHg is considered high. The problem: About one-third of those affected are unaware of their elevated blood pressure.

Elevated blood lipids and the cholesterol connection

LDL cholesterol – often referred to as 'bad' cholesterol – transports cholesterol to the tissues and, in excess, deposits in the artery walls. These deposits form plaques, which narrow and harden the vessels. HDL cholesterol, on the other hand – the 'good' cholesterol – transports excess cholesterol back to the liver, where it is broken down. High LDL and low HDL levels significantly increase cardiovascular risk. Triglycerides, another fraction of blood lipids, also contribute to the risk, especially when combined with low HDL.

Diabetes and insulin resistance

Diabetes mellitus and its precursor, insulin resistance, are significant and independent risk factors. Elevated blood sugar directly damages blood vessels and promotes inflammation. Diabetics have a two- to fourfold increased risk of heart attack and stroke. Particularly dangerous is the fact that diabetes rarely occurs in isolation – it is often accompanied by high blood pressure, elevated cholesterol, and obesity, which multiplies the risks.

Smoking, obesity and lack of exercise

Smoking is the single most preventable risk factor. Tobacco smoke directly damages blood vessels, raises blood pressure, promotes blood clotting and inflammation, and lowers protective HDL cholesterol. Every cigarette is one too many. Excess weight, especially when fat is concentrated around the midsection—visceral abdominal fat—is metabolically active and promotes inflammation, insulin resistance, and high blood pressure. Lack of exercise is an independent risk factor that amplifies all others. Even at a normal weight, a sedentary lifestyle increases cardiovascular risk. Finally, chronic stress contributes: It raises blood pressure permanently, promotes unhealthy coping mechanisms, and has direct negative effects on the cardiovascular system.

Nutrition for a healthy heart

Diet has an enormous impact on cardiovascular health—perhaps more than any other lifestyle factor. What you eat affects your blood pressure, blood lipid levels, blood sugar, weight, and the level of inflammation in your body. Unlike medications, which often address only one factor, a good diet works on multiple risk factors simultaneously. Certain dietary patterns have been shown to be particularly heart-protective in large scientific studies.

The Mediterranean diet as the gold standard

When it comes to heart health, the Mediterranean diet is the best-researched and most recommended eating style. The renowned PREDIMED study, one of the largest dietary intervention studies ever conducted, showed a 30 percent reduction in cardiovascular events in people who followed a Mediterranean diet compared to a low-fat control diet. That's an impressive result, comparable to some medications. The basic principles are simple: plenty of vegetables and fruit forming the basis of every meal; olive oil as the main source of fat, not only for cooking but also drizzled over salads and vegetables; fish several times a week, especially fatty varieties like salmon, mackerel, and sardines, which provide omega-3 fatty acids; legumes such as lentils, chickpeas, and beans, which provide fiber and plant-based protein; whole grains instead of refined white flour; nuts as a daily snack; moderate wine consumption, if desired, but not required. And at the same time: little red meat, few processed foods, and little sugar.

Omega-3 fatty acids for heart and blood vessels

The long-chain omega-3 fatty acids EPA and DHA, found primarily in oily fish, have several cardioprotective effects. They lower triglycerides in the blood, sometimes significantly. They have anti-inflammatory properties, which is important in arteriosclerosis, as inflammation plays a central role in plaque formation. They can slightly lower blood pressure and have positive effects on heart rhythm stability. The recommendation is two to three servings of oily fish per week. Those who don't like or eat fish can use omega-3 supplements made from fish oil or algae oil, although the data on supplements is less conclusive than on fish consumption itself.

Fiber and nuts as cholesterol reducers

Soluble fiber, such as that found in oats, legumes, apples, and psyllium husks, binds bile acids in the intestines and has been shown to lower LDL cholesterol by up to 10 to 15 percent. This already corresponds to a therapeutic effect. The recommendation is 25 to 30 grams of fiber daily – a value that most people fall far short of. Nuts are another asset for heart health. Just 30 grams a day – a small handful – lowers LDL cholesterol by five to 10 percent and provides heart-healthy unsaturated fatty acids. Walnuts, with their omega-3 content, and almonds, in particular, have been well-researched.

Polyphenols and plant antioxidants

Polyphenols are secondary plant compounds with antioxidant effects, found in colorful fruits and vegetables, olive oil, green tea, berries, and dark chocolate. They reduce oxidative stress and inflammation—both processes that contribute to atherosclerosis. A plant-rich, colorful diet provides these substances in their natural form, which is more effective than isolated supplements.

What you should reduce

Besides what you should eat, it's important what you should reduce. Saturated fats from red meat, high-fat dairy products, and fried foods raise LDL cholesterol. Trans fats, found in many processed foods, are particularly harmful—they raise LDL while simultaneously lowering HDL. Too much salt increases blood pressure; the recommendation is a maximum of five to six grams per day, which most people exceed. Sugar and refined carbohydrates increase triglycerides and promote obesity and diabetes. A heart-healthy diet minimizes these factors without completely eliminating them—it's about the overall pattern, not individual prohibitions.

Exercise – the best medicine

If there were a drug that lowered blood pressure, improved blood lipid levels, regulated blood sugar, reduced weight, strengthened the heart, reduced stress, and boosted mood—all with virtually no side effects—it would be a blockbuster. That drug exists, and it's called physical activity. Exercise is perhaps the single most powerful lever you can pull for your cardiovascular health, and its effects are comparable to those of medication.

The diverse effects of movement

Regular physical activity has a positive effect on almost every risk factor. Even moderate exercise can lower systolic blood pressure by five to ten mmHg – equivalent to the effect of blood pressure medication. The mechanism: Exercise improves vascular elasticity, reduces peripheral resistance, and modulates the autonomic nervous system. Blood lipid levels also improve: HDL, the protective cholesterol, increases, while triglycerides decrease. These effects are particularly pronounced with endurance training. Exercise has a direct effect on blood sugar: Muscle activity consumes glucose and improves the insulin sensitivity of cells. This is crucial for diabetes prevention. Calorie expenditure increases, and – perhaps more importantly – exercise builds muscle mass and reduces visceral abdominal fat, the metabolically most problematic type of fat.

Training the heart as a muscle

The heart is a muscle, and like any muscle, it can be trained. A trained heart works more efficiently: it pumps more blood with each beat, therefore needs fewer beats per minute, and operates more economically. The resting heart rate decreases – a sign of a high-performing heart. More reserves are available during exertion. At the same time, exercise reduces stress and its negative cardiovascular effects: cortisol levels drop, endorphins are released, and mood improves. These psychological effects should not be underestimated, as chronic stress is a risk factor in its own right.

The official recommendations

The recommendations of the World Health Organization and cardiology societies are clear: at least 150 minutes of moderate physical activity per week, or alternatively, 75 minutes of vigorous activity. Moderate activity means you get slightly out of breath but can still hold a conversation. This includes brisk walking, cycling on flat terrain, swimming at a moderate pace, and gardening. Vigorous activity leaves you noticeably out of breath: jogging, mountain biking, weight training, and fast swimming. Ideally, you should combine endurance and strength training. Strength training isn't just important for muscles—it improves insulin sensitivity, strengthens bones, and has its own cardiovascular benefits.

Practical implementation in everyday life

150 minutes per week sounds like a lot, but it's quite manageable: 30 minutes on five days, or 50 minutes on three days. The time doesn't have to be all at once – three ten-minute blocks count just as well. Many everyday activities count as movement: the quick walk to work, taking the stairs instead of the elevator, gardening on the weekend, playing with the children. Ideally, you'd have a structure like two to three cardio sessions plus two strength training sessions per week, but even less is better than nothing. Beginners should increase their activity gradually and consult their doctor if they have any pre-existing medical conditions.

Every movement counts – even small steps

A key finding of research: The greatest health benefits come from transitioning from "no exercise at all" to "some exercise." The first steps are the most valuable. Ten minutes of walking isn't useless just because it's not 30. A single workout per week is better than none. "Sitting is the new smoking"—regular breaks from sitting are important, even if you're exercising. Get up every hour, take a few steps, stretch. The perfect workout plan exists, but it's the enemy of good: An imperfect plan that you follow is better than a perfect plan sitting in a drawer.

Check blood pressure

High blood pressure is the most important modifiable risk factor for cardiovascular disease – even more so than smoking, high cholesterol, or diabetes. This is due to its widespread prevalence and serious consequences. Approximately 20 to 30 percent of the adult population has high blood pressure, and among those over 65, it's the majority. The problem is that high blood pressure often causes no symptoms for a long time. You feel fine while damage is silently and continuously taking place in your blood vessels.

Understanding the numbers

Blood pressure is measured in two values, given in millimeters of mercury (mmHg). The upper, systolic value corresponds to the pressure at the moment of heart contraction, when the heart pumps blood into the arteries. The lower, diastolic value corresponds to the pressure during the relaxation phase between heartbeats. Optimal blood pressure is below 120/80 mmHg – this is where the cardiovascular risk is lowest. Values ​​up to 129/84 are considered normal, 130 to 139/85 to 89 are considered high-normal – a range where attention is already warranted. From 140/90 mmHg, it is classified as grade 1 hypertension, from 160/100 as grade 2, and from 180/110 as grade 3, with a significantly increased risk of acute hypertension. Important: Both values ​​are important. An isolated elevated systolic value with a normal diastolic value also requires treatment.

Why high blood pressure damages blood vessels

Imagine your blood vessels as flexible tubes. If the pressure inside them is consistently too high, several things happen. The delicate inner lining of the vessels, the endothelium, is damaged. This damage is the starting point for arteriosclerosis – cholesterol and other substances are deposited at the damaged sites, forming plaques. At the same time, the vessels lose elasticity and become stiff, which further increases blood pressure – a vicious cycle. The heart has to pump against the increased resistance and thickens in the process. This thickening of the left ventricle, known as hypertrophy, is initially an adaptation, but becomes a problem in the long term: The thickened heart needs more oxygen and is more susceptible to arrhythmias and heart failure. Other organs also suffer: The kidneys are damaged by high pressure, the retina of the eyes changes, and the risk of stroke increases significantly.

Lower blood pressure naturally

The good news: Blood pressure can often be significantly lowered through lifestyle changes, sometimes enough to avoid or reduce medication. Weight loss is one of the most effective levers – for every kilogram of weight lost, blood pressure drops by about one mmHg. With ten kilograms of excess weight, this reduction is comparable to medication. The DASH diet (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) was specifically developed to lower blood pressure and is very effective: plenty of vegetables and fruit, whole grains, low-fat dairy products, little salt, and little saturated fat. Salt reduction is key – the recommendation is a maximum of five to six grams per day, while most people consume twice that amount. The majority of salt doesn't come from the salt shaker, but from processed foods, bread, sausage, and ready-made meals. Potassium-rich foods such as bananas, potatoes, and legumes have a blood pressure-lowering effect and counteract sodium. Regular exercise, limiting alcohol consumption, and stress management are other important components.

Measure your blood pressure regularly

A home blood pressure monitor is a worthwhile investment – ​​good devices are available for as little as 30 to 50 euros. Self-monitoring has advantages: you can identify the so-called white coat hypertension effect, where blood pressure is elevated in the doctor's office due to anxiety, but normal at home. You can see trends over time and the effect of your measures. Measure your blood pressure in the morning after waking up and in the evening, each time after a few minutes of rest. Document the readings. If your readings are repeatedly above 140/90 mmHg, you should consult a doctor.

Cholesterol and blood lipids

Elevated blood lipids, especially LDL cholesterol, are a major driver of atherosclerosis. Our understanding of these connections has advanced considerably in recent decades, and today we know that the lower the LDL, the better for the blood vessels – there appears to be no threshold below which LDL ceases to be harmful. This makes controlling blood lipids a key element of cardiovascular prevention.

Understanding the different blood lipids

When people talk about cholesterol, most mean total cholesterol. But this value alone is not very informative – the distribution across the different lipoprotein fractions is crucial. LDL cholesterol (low-density lipoprotein), often referred to as "bad" cholesterol, transports cholesterol from the liver to the tissues. When there is an excess – when more LDL circulates in the blood than the cells can absorb – it penetrates the vessel walls and is deposited there. These deposits, along with inflammatory cells and connective tissue, form atherosclerotic plaques. HDL cholesterol (high-density lipoprotein), the "good" cholesterol, works in reverse: It picks up excess cholesterol from the tissues and vessel walls and transports it back to the liver, where it is broken down or excreted. A high HDL level is therefore protective. Triglycerides are another important blood lipid fraction. They originate partly from food, and partly are produced by the body itself – especially with excessive sugar and alcohol consumption. Elevated triglycerides are an independent risk factor, particularly in combination with low HDL cholesterol.

Know the target values

Target values ​​for LDL cholesterol depend on individual risk. In people without risk factors, an LDL level below 116 mg/dl is considered adequate. For moderate risk, the value should be below 100 mg/dl, for high risk below 70 mg/dl, and for very high risk (after a heart attack or in cases of diabetes with organ damage) even below 55 mg/dl. HDL cholesterol should be above 40 mg/dl for men and above 50 mg/dl for women – higher values ​​are better. Triglycerides should remain below 150 mg/dl. Total cholesterol is less informative, but values ​​below 200 mg/dl are generally considered desirable.

Lower cholesterol naturally

Before discussing medication, it's worth considering lifestyle changes that can improve blood lipids. Soluble fiber is one of the most effective natural cholesterol reducers. Oatmeal, psyllium husks, legumes, apples, and barley contain beta-glucan and other soluble fibers that bind bile acids in the intestines, thus promoting cholesterol excretion. Ten to 25 grams of soluble fiber daily can lower LDL by ten to fifteen percent. Plant sterols and stanols, which occur naturally in nuts, seeds, and vegetable oils, or are added to some products like margarine and yogurt, block cholesterol absorption in the intestines and can lower LDL by another seven to ten percent. Omega-3 fatty acids from oily fish are particularly effective at lowering triglycerides, sometimes significantly. Two to three servings of fish per week are recommended. Nuts—30 grams daily—lower LDL by about five to ten percent and simultaneously provide heart-healthy unsaturated fatty acids. And last but not least, weight loss improves the overall lipid profile: LDL and triglycerides decrease, HDL increases.

What you should avoid

On the other hand, there are dietary factors that worsen the lipid profile. Trans fats are particularly harmful – they raise LDL and simultaneously lower HDL, a doubly detrimental combination. Trans fats are produced during the industrial hydrogenation of vegetable oils and are found in many baked goods, cookies, fried foods, and some margarines. Excessive saturated fats from red meat, high-fat dairy products, and tropical oils also raise LDL. Simple sugars and refined carbohydrates increase triglycerides.

When medication becomes necessary

Medication may be necessary in cases of very high cholesterol levels, known cardiovascular disease, or a high calculated overall risk. Statins are the best-researched and most effective cholesterol-lowering drugs. They not only reduce LDL cholesterol but have also been proven to lower the risk of heart attack and stroke. The decision for or against medication is made by the doctor based on the individual risk profile – there is no shame in needing medication, but it is advisable to first exhaust all lifestyle measures.

Blood sugar and diabetes prevention

Type 2 diabetes is more than a metabolic disorder – it is a primary cardiovascular risk factor. People with diabetes have a two- to fourfold increased risk of heart attack and stroke. This is because elevated blood sugar directly damages blood vessels and promotes inflammation. Even more alarming: This damage begins in the pre-diabetic stage, long before a diabetes diagnosis is made. Therefore, preventing diabetes is also cardiovascular prevention.

The insidious path to diabetes

Type 2 diabetes doesn't develop overnight, but over years. It usually begins with insulin resistance: the body's cells, especially muscle, fat, and liver cells, become less sensitive to the hormone insulin. To keep blood sugar levels within the normal range, the pancreas produces more insulin. Initially, this compensation works – blood sugar remains normal, but insulin levels are elevated. Over time, however, the capacity of the insulin-producing cells becomes exhausted. They can no longer meet the increased demand, and blood sugar levels begin to rise. The precursor is prediabetes – elevated fasting blood sugar levels or impaired glucose tolerance. At this stage, the development of diabetes can still be stopped, even reversed. If left untreated, type 2 diabetes develops, characterized by chronically elevated blood sugar levels.

Why elevated blood sugar damages blood vessels

Excess glucose is toxic to blood vessels through several mechanisms. In a process called glycation, excess sugar binds to proteins and disrupts their function. These glycation end products accumulate in the vessel walls, contributing to their hardening and dysfunction. The HbA1c value, which reflects the average blood sugar level over the past two to three months, essentially measures the glycation of hemoglobin. Elevated blood sugar also promotes oxidative stress—the formation of aggressive oxygen compounds that damage cell structures. Finally, high blood sugar triggers chronic low-grade inflammation in the blood vessels, accelerating the process of atherosclerosis. This affects both large vessels—leading to heart attacks, strokes, and peripheral artery disease—and small vessels, potentially causing kidney damage, eye disease, and nerve damage.

The power of lifestyle intervention

The large Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) study from the USA impressively demonstrated the impact of lifestyle intervention. People with prediabetes were either treated with the drug metformin, received an intensive lifestyle intervention, or remained untreated. The result was remarkable: The lifestyle intervention reduced the risk of diabetes by 58 percent – ​​significantly more than metformin, which reduced it by 31 percent. The core components were manageable: a moderate weight loss of five to seven percent of the initial weight and 150 minutes of moderate physical activity per week. This is not an extreme diet, not a marathon – these are achievable goals that have an enormous effect.

Know the important values

Two values ​​are particularly relevant for diabetes prevention. Fasting blood glucose is measured in the morning after at least eight hours of fasting. A value below 100 mg/dl is normal. Between 100 and 125 mg/dl, prediabetes is present; above 126 mg/dl, it is considered diabetes. The HbA1c value shows the average blood glucose level over the last two to three months and is less affected by current fluctuations. A value below 5.7 percent is normal; between 5.7 and 6.4 percent, prediabetes is present; and above 6.5 percent, diabetes is present. Regular checkups are recommended starting at age 35, or earlier if risk factors such as obesity, a family history of diabetes, or lack of exercise are present.

Nutrition for stable blood sugar

Diet plays a central role in diabetes prevention. A Mediterranean diet rich in vegetables, olive oil, nuts, and fish has proven protective. The quality of carbohydrates is crucial: whole grains, legumes, and non-starchy vegetables cause blood sugar to rise slowly and are processed more efficiently by the body. Refined carbohydrates and sugars, on the other hand, cause rapid blood sugar spikes and promote insulin resistance. Dietary fiber slows down sugar absorption and is essential. And last but not least: every meal should contain protein and healthy fats, which lower the overall glycemic index of the meal.

Other lifestyle factors

Nutrition and exercise are the cornerstones of cardiovascular prevention, but they don't stand alone. Other lifestyle factors significantly influence your heart health – some of which are often underestimated. Smoking, alcohol, stress, and sleep deserve special attention, as they can negate the positive effects of a good diet and regular exercise – or conversely, support prevention.

Quitting smoking – The most important single step

Smoking is the single most preventable risk factor for cardiovascular disease. The damage caused by tobacco smoke is multifaceted and cumulative. Smoke contains thousands of chemicals that directly damage the vascular endothelium and promote the onset of atherosclerosis. Smoking increases blood clotting and makes blood clots more likely—the direct mechanism for heart attack and stroke. It lowers protective HDL cholesterol while simultaneously increasing blood pressure and heart rate. It promotes systemic inflammation and oxidative stress. Every single cigarette is a small assault on your cardiovascular system. The good news is equally impressive: After quitting, the system recovers relatively quickly. After just one year of being smoke-free, the risk of heart disease is roughly halved. After 15 years, it's nearly the same as that of a lifelong non-smoker. It's never too late to quit—the benefits begin within hours of your last cigarette.

Alcohol – A complicated relationship

The evidence regarding alcohol and heart health is complex and has changed in recent years. Older observational studies showed that moderate alcohol consumption—around one glass of wine a day—was associated with a lower cardiovascular risk, the famous "red wine effect." However, newer, methodologically sound analyses have qualified this finding. It seems that the apparent protective effect of moderate drinking is partly due to other factors that correlate with moderate consumption, such as higher socioeconomic status or a generally healthier lifestyle. The current scientific consensus is: those who don't drink shouldn't start for health reasons. Those who drink moderately—a maximum of one drink a day for women, two for men—don't have to stop, but a health benefit is not guaranteed. What is certain, however, is that excessive alcohol consumption raises blood pressure, promotes weight gain through empty calories, and can directly damage the heart—alcoholic cardiomyopathy is a recognized heart disease.

Stress – The underestimated risk factor

Chronic stress is an independent cardiovascular risk factor whose significance has long been underestimated. The mechanisms are both direct and indirect. Directly, stress hormones such as cortisol and adrenaline sustainably increase blood pressure and heart rate. They promote inflammatory processes and adverse changes in lipid metabolism. Indirectly, stress leads to unhealthy coping strategies: more food, especially unhealthy comfort food, more smoking, more alcohol, less exercise, and less sleep. These indirect effects amplify the direct ones. The 'broken heart syndrome' (Takotsubo cardiomyopathy) dramatically demonstrates that extreme emotional stress can even trigger acute, heart attack-like events. Strategies for combating chronic stress are diverse: regular relaxation techniques such as meditation, progressive muscle relaxation, or yoga; physical activity as a natural stress release valve; maintaining social contacts and relationships; consciously striving for a healthy work-life balance; and, if needed, professional psychological support.

Sleep – The underestimated pillar

Sleep is the fourth pillar of cardiovascular health, alongside nutrition, exercise, and stress management. Seven to nine hours of sleep per night are considered optimal for adults. Too little sleep—consistently less than six hours—increases the risk of high blood pressure, diabetes, and obesity, and thus indirectly, the risk of cardiovascular disease. Too much sleep also appears to be associated with an increased risk, although other factors may play a role here. Sleep apnea, the repeated pauses in breathing during sleep, usually accompanied by snoring, is of particular importance. Sleep apnea is an independent cardiovascular risk factor that often goes undetected. Indications include loud snoring, observed pauses in breathing, excessive daytime sleepiness despite sufficient sleep duration, and obesity as a risk factor. If sleep apnea is suspected, an evaluation in a sleep lab should be performed; treatment with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) not only improves quality of life but also the cardiovascular risk profile.

Know your values ​​– The cardiovascular check

Prevention without measurements is like driving a car without a speedometer – you don't know where you are or if you're heading in the right direction. Knowing your cardiovascular values ​​is a key component of cardiovascular prevention. Only when you know your blood pressure, cholesterol levels, and blood sugar levels can you take targeted action and assess the effectiveness of your measures.

The most important parameters at a glance

Several values ​​are relevant for assessing your cardiovascular risk. Blood pressure should ideally be measured regularly – preferably at home with your own device. Morning and evening measurements over several days provide a more realistic picture than a single measurement in a doctor's office. Documenting the values ​​helps to identify trends and evaluate the effect of interventions. Blood lipid levels – LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, and total cholesterol – require a blood test, ideally performed while fasting. These should be checked every few years, depending on baseline values ​​and risk profile; more frequently if values ​​are elevated or if you are currently undergoing treatment. Blood sugar, measured as fasting glucose or, better yet, as HbA1c (long-term blood sugar), provides information about your metabolic status and risk of developing diabetes. Weight and especially waist circumference are easy to measure yourself. BMI is a rough indicator, but waist circumference is more informative for cardiovascular risk because it reflects visceral fat. Increased risk exists from 94 centimeters for men and 80 centimeters for women; significantly increased risk from 102 and 88 centimeters respectively.

When and how often to test

From the age of 35, the so-called Check-up 35 is covered by health insurance and is recommended every three years. It includes a physical examination, an assessment of risk factors, and laboratory tests such as blood sugar and cholesterol levels. If risk factors are present—such as a family history of diabetes, being overweight, or smoking—earlier initiation and more frequent check-ups are advisable. For known abnormalities such as high blood pressure, elevated blood lipids, or prediabetes, regular check-ups are necessary as part of treatment. Your doctor will recommend intervals that suit your individual situation. Taking your own blood pressure and weight measurements complements the professional check-ups and provides you with ongoing feedback.

Convenient testing options from home

A doctor's visit isn't always necessary or readily available. For many cardiovascular markers, it's now possible to conveniently test them at home. The DoctorBox Cardiovascular Check allows you to easily determine important values ​​such as cholesterol and triglycerides. Blood is drawn at home via finger prick, analyzed in a certified laboratory, and you receive the results online with easy-to-understand explanations. This way, you can keep track of your heart health without having to wait for a doctor's appointment – ​​ideal for regular self-monitoring between official check-ups.

Assess the overall risk

Individual values ​​are less informative than the interplay of all factors. Therefore, doctors use risk calculators like SCORE (Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation) or PROCAM, which combine several parameters and calculate the ten-year risk of a cardiovascular event. This calculation incorporates age, sex, smoking status, blood pressure, and cholesterol. The result categorizes you as having low, moderate, high, or very high risk and determines how aggressive prevention and, if necessary, treatment should be. A high LDL level in a 30-year-old without other risk factors is assessed differently than the same level in a 60-year-old smoker with high blood pressure. The doctor can make this classification and adjust the recommendations accordingly.

Sicherheit durch Testen

Jetzt wo du die Symptome kennst: Verschaffe dir Klarheit mit einem diskreten Heimtest.

Get a cardiovascular check-up

Empfohlener Heimtest

Produkt: cardiovascular check

Analyse im Fachlabor
Diskrete Verpackung
Ergebnis in 72h

Conclusion – Your heart is in your hand

Cardiovascular diseases aren't strokes of fate that simply happen. They develop over decades, driven by risk factors that are largely within your control. Scientists estimate that up to 80 percent of all heart attacks and strokes could be prevented through consistent preventative measures. That's a remarkable figure that gives hope—and simultaneously places a responsibility on your shoulders. From the age of 35, you have the opportunity to set the course for the second half of your life. The blood vessels you protect today will carry you in 20 or 30 years.

The five pillars of heart prevention

The most important measures can be summarized in five pillars, which together form a stable foundation for cardiovascular health. Nutrition comes first: A Mediterranean diet rich in vegetables, olive oil, nuts, and fish, while simultaneously reducing processed foods, salt, sugar, and saturated fats, lowers several risk factors at once. It's not about strict prohibitions, but about an overall healthy eating pattern. Exercise is the second pillar and perhaps the most powerful single factor: 150 minutes of moderate activity per week, ideally supplemented by strength training, acts like a medicine on blood pressure, blood lipids, blood sugar, and weight – without side effects. Reducing sedentary behavior is just as important as adding active movement.

Not smoking is the single most important factor in cardiovascular prevention. Every cigarette is harmful, and it's never too late to quit. Vascular recovery begins almost immediately after quitting smoking. Weight control, especially the reduction of visceral abdominal fat, has a tremendous impact on all other risk factors. Even a five to ten percent weight loss can lower blood pressure, improve blood lipids, and increase insulin sensitivity. Finally, stress management should not be underestimated: Chronic stress increases cardiovascular risk both directly and indirectly, and integrating relaxation techniques, social interaction, and sufficient sleep into daily life is an important part of prevention.

Know where you stand

All these measures become more effective when you know your vital signs. Regular monitoring of blood pressure, blood lipids, and blood sugar – whether at the doctor's office or with home tests – allows you to detect problems early and measure the success of your efforts. Prevention without monitoring is like sailing without a compass: you don't know if you're on course.

The long-term view

Cardiovascular prevention is not a sprint, but a marathon. It's not about perfect nutrition, extreme fitness programs, or complete abstinence from everything that brings joy. It's about sustainable habits that you can maintain for decades. Small, consistent improvements add up to significant effects. Taking the stairs instead of the elevator, more vegetables on your plate, an evening walk, a chat with friends – all these small decisions shape your cardiovascular destiny over time.

Your heart beats roughly 100,000 times a day, 35 million times a year, over 2.5 billion times in an average lifetime. It deserves your attention and care. By making the right decisions today—not perfect, but consistently good ones—you lay the foundation for many more years with a healthy heart. The control is in your hands.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

Generally speaking: the earlier, the better. Arteriosclerosis begins in young adulthood. However, age 35 is an important milestone – from then on, regular check-ups (Check-up 35) are covered by health insurance. If you have a family history of arteriosclerosis, are overweight, or smoke, you should pay attention to your blood work even earlier. The good habits you establish in your 20s and 30s will pay off for decades.

The old warning against eggs because of cholesterol is outdated. For most people, dietary cholesterol has little impact on blood cholesterol – the body reduces its own production. Studies show that up to one egg a day does not increase cardiovascular risk in healthy individuals. Eggs provide high-quality protein, vitamins, and choline. However, more caution may be advisable for those with existing diabetes or very high cholesterol.

This recommendation is no longer given across the board. While observational studies have shown beneficial effects with moderate consumption, more recent analyses suggest that this may be due to other factors. The polyphenols in red wine are healthy, but alcohol itself also has negative effects. Current consensus: Those who don't drink shouldn't start. Those who drink moderately don't have to stop, but there is no health-related reason to drink.

The good news: It works relatively quickly. Even a single endurance session lowers blood pressure for hours (the "acute effect"). With regular training, sustained reductions of 5-10 mmHg systolic and 3-5 mmHg diastolic are possible after 4-12 weeks – comparable to the effect of blood pressure medication. Important: Consistency is more important than intensity. Moderate, regular activity is more effective than sporadic high-intensity training.

Absolutely! It's never too late. Even those who start at 50, 60, or later benefit from lifestyle changes. Quitting smoking is worthwhile at any age – the risk decreases significantly within years. Exercise improves heart health, even in older people. Dietary changes lower cholesterol and blood pressure regardless of age. Of course, earlier is better, but it's never too late.

Not necessarily. For slightly elevated levels without other risk factors, lifestyle modification is the first step: diet, exercise, and weight loss. This can lower LDL by 10-20%. Medication (usually statins) is recommended in cases of very high levels, known cardiovascular disease, diabetes, or a high calculated overall risk. The doctor makes the decision after individual assessment.

Classic symptoms: Severe chest pain or pressure (lasting more than 5 minutes), often radiating to the left arm, jaw, and back. Shortness of breath. Cold sweats. Nausea. Anxiety. BUT: In women and diabetics, symptoms are often atypical – only upper abdominal pain, nausea, and extreme fatigue. When in doubt, always call emergency services (112). Time is of the essence – the faster the treatment, the better the prognosis.

Both are transport proteins for cholesterol. LDL (low-density lipoprotein) transports cholesterol to the cells – in excess, it is deposited in the artery walls and promotes arteriosclerosis (hence 'bad'). HDL (high-density lipoprotein) transports excess cholesterol back to the liver for disposal – it 'cleans up' and thus protects the arteries (hence 'good'). Goal: low LDL, high HDL.

Yes, the evidence is clear. Chronic stress increases cardiovascular risk through several pathways: persistently elevated stress hormones (cortisol, adrenaline), increased blood pressure and heart rate, heightened inflammation, and indirect effects from unhealthy coping strategies (diet, smoking, lack of exercise). The 'broken heart syndrome' (Takotsubo cardiomyopathy) demonstrates that extreme emotional stress can even trigger acute heart problems.

The evidence is mixed. Omega-3 from fish oil has been shown to lower triglycerides. However, the research on its effectiveness in preventing heart attacks in healthy individuals is less convincing – the benefit appears to be minimal. A better approach is to eat 2-3 portions of fatty fish per week. For elevated triglycerides, high-dose omega-3 supplements may be beneficial – ideally under medical supervision. Other supplements (vitamin E, antioxidants) have not been proven effective for heart health.

Bereit für den nächsten Schritt?

Du hast jetzt alle wichtigen Informationen. Sorge für deine Gesundheit mit einem zuverlässigen Heimtest.

Get a cardiovascular check-up
DoctorBox AI Advisor
Hey! 👋 What health concerns do you have? I will help you find the right test.

AI-powered – Answers may be inaccurate.

Submit Withdrawal Request

Please fill out the following form to submit your withdrawal request.