Cardiac Risk Markers
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Plain
- Apolipoprotein A-1 Test
- Apolipoprotein B Test
- High Sensitivity C-Reactive Protein (hs-CRP) Test
Description
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Overview
Cardiac risk markers are blood tests that predict the occurrence of coronary heart disease. High sensitivity C-Reactive Protein (hs-CRP), Apolipoprotein A-1, Apolipoprotein B, APOB/ APO A1 RATIO and Lipoprotein (A) totals. Factors that put you at a higher risk for cardiovascular diseases are cardiac risk factors, high blood pressure, high cholesterol and smoking are three key risk factors for heart disease.
These risk factors and having a family history of cardiovascular disease increase your risk of heart attacks and stroke. If you have these risk factors, it is ideal to adapt your lifestyle to help reduce them. Cardiac risk markers are chemicals secreted by the heart muscle when it is damaged or diseased. These chemicals are frequently examined in blood tests to assist doctors in diagnosing cardiac disease.
Patients with an increase in cardiac risk markers results should be evaluated regularly because these proteins can boost degradation-inducing enzymes and harm the heart. A cardiac risk markers chart helps assess the risk of heart failure, coronary artery disease and myocardial infarction, among other cardiac disorders. The cardiac risk markers results help estimate the chances of future events rather than serve as a diagnosis.
Risk Assessment
To detect cardiac disease conditions, including a heart attack (myocardial infarction), angina and heart failure. Abnormal values of cardiac risk markers indicate ACS or myocardial ischemia.