India to account for 60% of global heart disease cases

India will account for approximately 60% of heart disease cases worldwide within two years, according to new research published in the journal Lancet.

The study, led by Dr Denis Xavier of St John's National Academy of Health Sciences in Bangalore and other researchers from Canada says one major problem is that Indians are unable to reach hospitals quickly in an emergency. Other risk factors in India were the same as elsewhere including tobacco use, high levels of lipids in the blood due to diets rich in saturated fat, and hypertension.

"As the Indian economy grows, there is a possibility for further increase in cardiovascular disease before we see a decline similar to that being witnessed in developed countries," US cardiologist Kim Eagle wrote in a commentary in the Lancet.

Read more in this BBC story

More like this

I will never forget the very first patient history I ever took. Part of medical school training is they send you onto the wards to gather patient histories and physicals so you learn to gather information effectively as a clinician. My first patient history was on a woman about 35 years old on…
It might be hard to recall a time when we didnât know that exercise is good for your heart, and smoking is bad for it â but, back in 1948, researchers and clinicians knew little about the causes of cardiovascular disease. That year, the National Heart Institute (now the National Heart, Lung, and…
Image by thienzieyung Most people know that consuming too much fat, and especially saturated fat, is bad for your health.  That's why there has been a concerted push for several decades to get people to reduce the amount of saturated fat that they consume, and to replace it with complex…
Last week in Moscow, the World Health Organization and Russian Federation held the First Global Ministerial Conference on Healthy Lifestyles and Noncommunicable Disease Control, which addressed the "slow-motion catastrophe" of rising rates of non-communicable illnesses like heart disease and…

Most Indians are Hindu and don't eat beef...so I guess that blows the "too many Big Macs" theory out the window. The story does say that they may be getting too many saturated fats, but other than ghee what other sources of saturated fats are they eating...?...avocados? Actually, Indians do eat a lot of carbohydrates, particularly rice, naan (flat bread), and root vegetables. Perhaps it's not the smoking or the hypertension that's the main risk factor, but the simple sugars and processed carbs? From what I seem to be able to read, albeit between the lines, that's an obvious contributing factor that's simply being ignored.

Yes,
several reports have found that curcumin may reduce the risk of heart failure. However, it is possible that the other factors, like increased tobacco use and increased stress, may override the effects of curcumin.