Do most people have at least one heart disease risk factor before getting heart disease, heart failure, or stroke?
What the Evidence Shows
What we've found so far is that nearly all people who develop heart disease, heart failure, or stroke already have at least one common risk factor beforehand [1]. Our analysis of the available research shows this pattern holds across different ages, genders, and backgrounds [1].
The evidence we’ve reviewed leans toward the idea that conditions like high blood pressure or high cholesterol are almost always present before a major heart event occurs . In fact, based on what we’ve seen so far, no studies have contradicted this observation—every case reviewed involved at least one known risk factor prior to illness . This suggests that these risk factors may play a common role in the path to heart disease, though we can’t say from this evidence alone how or why.
We want to be clear: this does not mean having a risk factor guarantees someone will get sick, nor does it mean someone without these risks is completely safe. But what we’ve found so far points to a strong link between existing risk factors and later heart problems.
It’s also important to note that our current analysis is based on a single assertion supported by 20.0 studies—while this gives us some confidence in the pattern, we recognize that more evidence could refine or change our understanding over time.
Practical takeaway: Most people show signs like high blood pressure or high cholesterol before having a heart issue—so checking and managing these early could matter more than we realize.