February is Heart Health Month, yet heart disease remains the leading cause of death in the U.S., claiming about 647,000 lives each year—roughly one in four deaths (CDC).
We often hear about the lifestyle factors we can change—diet, exercise, stress management, and quitting smoking. But did you know that family history is one of the most significant risk factors you can’t change?
Why Family History Matters
Having a first-degree relative (parent or sibling) with heart disease increases your risk by 1.5 to 2 times. If that relative developed heart disease early—before 55 for men or 65 for women—your risk is even higher.
Your biological family history reflects inherited factors such as:
- Cholesterol metabolism (e.g., familial hypercholesterolemia)
- Blood pressure regulation
- Inflammation and clotting tendencies
- Arterial structure and stiffness
Some people inherit a predisposition to heart problems that lifestyle alone may not fully explain.
Lifestyle Still Makes the Biggest Difference
Most heart disease worldwide is linked to modifiable risk factors: smoking, high blood pressure, diabetes, obesity, inactivity, and high LDL cholesterol. Family history is important, but your daily choices remain the most powerful way to protect your heart.
What You Can Do if Heart Disease Runs in Your Family
- Start screenings earlier and get comprehensive checks
- Lower the threshold for treating borderline risk factors like mildly elevated cholesterol
- Adopt healthy habits to counterbalance genetic risk
Even with a genetic predisposition, a healthy lifestyle can substantially reduce your risk, sometimes nearly matching the average population. Family history may raise the stakes, but it doesn’t take control away from you.
For more guidance on heart health and other medical concerns, call Springpoint at Home at 609-366-1900.

