The many dimensions of a good night’s sleep

Getting a sufficient amount of sleep is vital for heart health, but sleep continuity, timing, and regularity may also be important. Irregularities in these lesser-known dimensions of sleep health are not considered problems unless they impair a person’s ability to function and quality of life. But emerging evidence suggest these sleep issues may affect cardiometabolic health. A sleep diary can help uncover potential issues.

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Smarter, safer workouts with a wearable fitness tracker

Wearable fitness trackers like smart watches offer measurable and motivating data for exercise routines and safety, especially for people with heart conditions. Features include movement reminders, step counts (a daily total of 4,000 to 7,000 steps is considered beneficial), heart rate zones for exercise intensity, and measurements of heart rate recovery and variability to assess overall heart health. These tools can help optimize workouts and reveal potential issues.

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Does hormone therapy delay menopause?

Using hormone therapy, which involves taking estrogen and sometimes progesterone, doesn’t stop or slow the approach of menopause. The arrival of menopause is determined by women’s ovaries, not by the amount of these hormones in the body.

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Midlife pressure surge

High blood pressure means that blood pushes against artery walls more forcefully than normal. Women’s blood pressure is typically lower than men’s until around age 60. An estimated 41% of women develop high blood pressure after menopause. High blood pressure increases people’s risks of heart attack, stroke, kidney disease, and other problems. Factors that increase women’s risk of high blood pressure at midlife include menopause, elevated sympathetic nerve activity, weight gain and redistribution, stress, and genetics.

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Sleeping better when you have pain

Approximately 50 million adults experience some daily pain. These people usually encounter fluctuations in pain during the day, but in many cases, the pain worsens at night, disrupting sleep. Many strategies can be adopted to prevent and manage nighttime pain, such as doing a pre-bedroom relaxation routine, creating a healthy sleep environment, reframing negative thinking, changing sleeping positions, and using supportive pillows.

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