 If I'm overweight, at what age should I start to be concerned about heart disease? 50. So if you're a female, it's right around 50. If you're a male, you know a little bit younger. And it depends on what group you're in. If you are in a high-risk family, if you have a strong family history of heart disease, you should consider what can I do in my lifestyle as I'm living to mitigate the risk for heart disease. I recommend that you really start screening. Well, this is a beautiful thing about being a female is that most of us have children at some point in our lives and we get screened for cardiovascular disease. You don't know that, but the OB is screening you for diabetes for hypertension. And actually pregnancy is a risk and stress test for the female body. And so I actually had high blood pressure in pregnancy. I had early preeclampsia and so I knew my whole life that I was at increased risk for high blood pressure and I monitored my blood pressure and it stayed pretty good. I ran, I kept it down and when I turned 50, bam, there you go. And that's something we don't talk about and I'm sure not many people have heard this, but if you've had preeclampsia or eclampsia in pregnancy, then you are at higher risk in the future and that is something that we don't talk about enough. You will get high blood pressure. Yeah, and I hate to say women, when they come to the office and I ask them about their pregnancies, they're looking at me a little cross-eyed. Like, why do you care about that? And I'm like, well, let me tell you why. It actually makes a difference. So a lot of women here, whatever your age might be, if you had these issues, it's something to keep in mind. Yeah, it's something to monitor. So on average age of 50 for women is when they really need to start really thinking about it unless they smoke or have diabetes. And if you smoke or have diabetes, your risks are accumulating at an earlier age.