Heart disease behind the 19.2 million death around the world in 2023
A recent study said that cardiovascular disease is still the first cause of deaths worldwide, as it caused the death of 19.2 million people in 2023, which is equivalent to the death of one in every three deaths. The study showed that the number of years of life adapted according to the disability associated with heart disease increased to 437 million years in 2023, compared to 320 million years in 1990, an increase of 1.4 times, and the numbers indicate major differences between countries as some countries record more than 16 times. The number of deaths increased from 13.1 million in 1990 to 19.2 million in 2023, one of the most important causes of coronary artery disease, cerebral bleeding, hoppers and heart disease caused by high blood pressure. Cardiovascular disease, cardiovascular disease, the first cause of death in the world. Cardiovascular diseases include ischy heart disease, brain vascular disease, peripheral arterial disease, rheumatic heart disease, congenital heart disease, deep veins thickened and pulmonary embroidery. The number of deaths due to cardiovascular disease reached 19.8 million in 2022, with 32% of total deaths worldwide. More than three -quarters of these deaths in low and medium revenue countries. Cardiovascular disease was at least 38% of a total of 18 million early deaths (before the age of 70) due to non -communicable diseases in 2021. The early detection of these diseases is required to facilitate therapeutic intervention with medication and medical advice. Cardiovascular disease can be prevented by controlling risk factors such as smoking, unhealthy diet, obesity, physical inactivity, alcohol use and air pollution. If you stop smoking, reduce salt, eat fruits and vegetables, exercise regularly and move away from alcohol, it reduces the risk of infection. The treatment of high blood pressure, diabetes and high fat is very important to reduce the risk of heart attacks and strokes among patients. The study indicated that 79.6% of the burden of heart disease worldwide is caused by adjustable risk factors, that is, the prevention or change of lifestyle would have avoided millions of injuries, as this burden increased by 97.4 million additional cases since 1990, driven by the increasing obesity and high level of blood sugar, such as the most prominent metabolic factors, such as the most prominent metabolic factors, such as the most prominent metabolic Behavior, such as smoking, and smoking, and smoking, and smoking, and smok, and smok, and smok, like dress and smok, and smoker, like jerk, like jerk, like jerk, like jerk, like jerk, like jerk, like jerk, and smoking, like smoking, and jerking, and smoking, and smoking, and smoking, and smoking. and unsafe consumption of alcohol. Environmental and professional factors played an important role, the most prominent air pollution, bullets and thermal fluctuations, and despite the decline in smoking rates and improving the quality of home air in the slowdown of the rate of Ascension, but other factors above their obesity and diabetes took a rapid upward, especially between 2018 and 2023, which the face of heart disease has. The numbers show a disturbing image of the size of the heart crisis worldwide, as the heart disease only affected 240 million people in 2023, while the number of people with the peripheral arterial disease in the lower limbs reached 122 million. Strips are still one of the most important causes of death and disability in the world, while data shows that men record higher mortality rates in most areas, with a sharp leap to the age of fifty. At the level of environmental factors, external air pollution only caused about 4 million heart attacks during 2023, with the registration of Oceania (a large geographical region in the Pacific, including the continent of Australia, Milanisia, Micronesia and Polynesia), despite the global drop in exposure. Exposure to bullets remains a prominent health challenge, especially in Central Asia and North Africa, which reflects the continuation of the gap between global progress and the fragile geographical bags. The main researcher in the study, Gregory Roth, director of the Cardiovascular Indicator Program at the University of Washington, said the new research countries give a clear map to know where to reach progress and where you need urgent move “by targeting adapted risks with effective policies and low -cost treatments, the early deaths. The study showed that the burden of heart disease is much higher beyond the most advanced countries, even after the age differences have kept in mind.