February is not just Valentine’s Month — it’s also American Heart Health Month. Cardiovascular disease (CVD) remains the leading cause of death globally, but an estimated 80% of heart disease can be prevented through lifestyle and diet changes.(PubMed) This is a perfect time to reflect on how we care for the organ that keeps us alive and loving every day: the heart.
Whether you have a family history of heart attacks, want to slow arterial aging, lower your blood pressure, or understand early markers like coronary calcium, this cardiovascular heart health guide will empower you with evidence-based steps to take control of your heart health.
🫀 Why Heart Disease Is Still So Common
Heart disease — including coronary artery disease (CAD), heart attack (myocardial infarction), and congestive heart failure — develops over decades as the arteries that feed the heart become clogged with plaque. Inflammatory and metabolic processes, not just cholesterol levels, drive this process. According to integrative cardiology research, traditional risk factor management alone (blood pressure, LDL cholesterol, diabetes, obesity, smoking) only goes so far; we must go beyond standard approaches.(PubMed)
A concept referred to as the “CHD gap” exists: many people have seemingly normal risk factor levels based on standard tests yet still develop heart disease. Houston and colleagues argue that optimal nutrition, lifestyle, weight management, exercise, and targeted testing are crucial for true prevention.(PubMed)
🧬 Genes Matter — But They Don’t Decide Your Fate
Many people worry that genetics doom them to a heart attack — but genetics are only part of the story. Genes influence how your body handles cholesterol, inflammation, and even diet response. But studies show that up to 73% of heart disease risk can be explained by lifestyle and modifiable factors — even when genetics contributes to predisposition. (MDPI)
This means genes are not destiny: what you eat, how you move, and how you manage stress and inflammation count a great deal.(PubMed)
Specific markers like the coronary artery calcium (CAC) score — measured on cardiac CT — provide a direct measure of calcified plaque burden and can be more predictive of heart events than genetics in risk stratification.(PubMed)
🧬 Genetic Risks & Personalized Prevention
Genetic testing now includes polygenic risk scores that quantify inherited susceptibility to coronary heart disease. This information — combined with traditional risk factors — helps clinicians personalize prevention strategies.
If you carry genetic variants linked to:
- High LDL or low HDL
- High blood pressure
- Hyperinflammation
- Metabolic dysfunction
Then your prevention plan may emphasize diet adjustments, targeted supplements, frequent monitoring and early intervention. So even if you have family history of early heart disease, proactive lifestyle changes can dramatically shift your personal heart health trajectory.
This reflects Mark Houston’s philosophy: know your risk, test accurately, and act early with nutrition, exercise, and individualized lifestyle strategies.(Routledge).
Specific markers like the coronary artery calcium (CAC) score — measured on cardiac CT — provide a direct measure of calcified plaque burden and can be more predictive of heart events than genetics in risk stratification.(PubMed)
🩺 Understanding Coronary Artery Calcification (CAC)
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Lifestyle factors like diet, exercise, maintaining a healthy weight, and not smoking are strongly linked to lower progression of arterial calcification.(PubMed)
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Preventing calcification means addressing inflammation, blood lipids, high blood pressure, blood sugar, and oxidative stress issues through holistic strategies.
🫀 Women & Heart Disease: Special Considerations
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Early menopause, Autoimmune diseases, Stress-related patterns can accelerate cardiovascular risk, and symptoms may present differently from men (e.g., jaw pain, fatigue, shortness of breath).
Nontraditional screening tools — like CAC scoring — help detect early changes in women who might appear “healthy” on traditional risk factor panels.(arXiv)
🥗 Heart-Healthy Foods That Protect Your Arteries
❌ Sugary foods and beverages
❌ Excess sodium
❌ Trans fats and highly refined carbohydrates
❌ Excessive red and processed meats
❌ Fried foods and added sugars
💪 Lifestyle Steps That Build a Resilient Heart
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Blood pressure
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Fasting glucose & HbA1c
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NMR Lipoprofile to track small LDL, better prediction of heart disease risk than LDL-C alonerisk after statin therapy, as conventional lipid panel does not provide accurate data
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LDL particle number and size: Research supports these numbers correlate strongly with coronary heart disease incidence and progression.(pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
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Inflammatory markers: HS-CRP, Uric acid, Homocyteine, OX-LDL, ApoB, LpA and coagulation related labwork
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Coronary calcium score (if appropriate and for men above 40, women above 45) quantifies calcified plaque
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Cardiac MRI: detects microvascular dysfunction, early fibrosis, and silent injury, pinpoints structural and functional abnormalities before they cause symptoms.
Other Factors in Heart Health: Environmental Stressors, Inflammation
Mold and Toxicity
Understanding your personal risk allows targeted prevention, the hallmark of Houston’s integrative cardiology approach.(Routledge). A growing number of integrative cardiology practitioners (including Dr. Mark Houston and colleagues) consider environmental toxins like mold and mycotoxins as part of the broader “internal burden” that drives cardiometabolic dysfunction. Consider evaluation of the following as these factors contribute to inflammation, metabolic dysregulation, and accelerated atherogenesis: mold exposure, heavy metals, insulin resistance, chronic stress, sleep problems. While direct mechanistic studies between mycotoxins and sLDL are limited, research supports:
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Chronic inflammation raises triglycerides
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High triglycerides are strongly associated with a shift toward small dense LDL
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Small dense LDL is more likely to be oxidized and retained in arterial walls
R educing inflammation protects artery walls, slows plaque progression, and supports overall heart wellbeing.
🥦 Supplements That Complement Heart Health (Evidence-Backed)
✔ CoQ10 – supports mitochondrial and cardiac energy
✔ Magnesium – helps regulate blood pressure and rhythm
✔ Vitamin D – linked to blood pressure control and immune modulation
✔ Plant polyphenols (e.g., from berries, green tea, turmeric) support vascular function
Always discuss supplements with our clinicians, especially if you’re on any prescription medications.
💓 Start Your Heart Health Makeover
Recheck risk markers regularly and adjust nutrition and lifestyle.
❤️ The Bottom Line: Your Heart Is Worth It







