![]()
Heart disease is now a pressing concern for young Indians, driven by modern lifestyles. The TOI Cardio Medithon 5 highlighted prevention through early screening and consistent healthy habits. Experts emphasized recognizing subtle symptoms, especially in women, and the importance of post-heart attack recovery and lifestyle adjustments for long-term well-being.
Heart disease is no longer a distant concern in India. It has moved into everyday life, affecting people in their 30s and 40s, sometimes even earlier. The reasons are not hidden. Long sitting hours, irregular meals, rising stress, and delayed health checks have changed how the heart behaves in modern India.This is where the TOI Cardio Medithon 5 steps in with a clear purpose. Scheduled for March 31, the event brings together leading cardiologists to speak in simple terms, so people understand what is happening inside their bodies before it is too late. The focus is not just treatment, but awareness that leads to timely action.
Prevention first: Small steps that quietly save lives
The prevention panel sets the tone with a simple idea. Heart disease does not start suddenly, it builds slowly over years.Dr Sunil Dwivedi, Consultant Cardiologist at Manipal Hospital, Bangalore, highlights that screening should begin early, even during school or college years. Waiting for symptoms is often too late.Dr Rajendra Kumar Jain, Head of Cardiology at KIMS Hospital, Hyderabad, explains that heart attacks are not always dramatic. Many warning signs are subtle and easy to dismiss.Dr Shuvanan Ray, Director of Cardiac Intervention at Fortis Hospital, Kolkata, stresses that healthy habits must begin in childhood, especially as obesity rises across age groups.
The discussion moves beyond advice that feels repetitive. It focuses on consistency. Daily movement, balanced eating, and routine tests for blood pressure, sugar, and cholesterol. These are not major changes, but they quietly reduce risk over time. Prevention, when done right, becomes the simplest and most effective form of care.
Young hearts under pressure: The Gen Z shift
Heart health is no longer linked only to age. It is now deeply connected to lifestyle, especially among younger people.Dr Sunil Kumar Mandal, Head of Cardiology at Kailash Hospital, Greater Noida, points out that feeling healthy does not always mean being healthy. Heart issues can progress silently.Dr Rahul Singhal, Director of Interventional Cardiology at Fortis Escorts Hospital, Jaipur, draws attention to junk food, poor sleep, and stress as key triggers in younger populations.Dr Nitin Kumar Reddy, Consultant Cardiologist at Sir H. N. Reliance Hospital, Mumbai, brings clarity to exercise.
While guidelines suggest at least 150 minutes of activity each week, the quality of exercise matters just as much as the duration.This session reflects a quiet but important shift. Teenagers and young adults are now showing early signs of hypertension, obesity, and pre-diabetes. The panel connects everyday habits, late nights, screen time, and food choices, to long-term heart risks. It makes one thing clear. The heart begins to age with lifestyle, not just with years.
Women and heart health: The symptoms we often miss
Heart disease in women often remains hidden, not because it is rare, but because it looks different.Dr Sukriti Bhalla, Senior Consultant Cardiologist at Akash Healthcare, New Delhi, explains that symptoms in women can be subtle, such as fatigue rather than sharp chest pain.Dr Manish Jain, Consultant Cardiologist associated with Saifee, Bhatia, and Cumballa Hill Hospitals, Mumbai, highlights the role of emotional stress.
High cortisol levels over time can affect heart health.Dr J Cecily Mary Majella, HOD and Professor of Cardiology at Tamil Nadu Government Multi Super Speciality Hospital, explains the protective role of estrogen in younger women. As hormone levels decline, cholesterol patterns and risks begin to change.The panel also brings in a social reality. Many women delay their own health checks while caring for their families.
This delay often leads to late diagnosis. The discussion encourages early attention, regular screenings, and taking symptoms seriously, even when they appear mild.
Life after a heart attack: Recovery is a second journey
Surviving a heart attack is only the beginning. The real challenge lies in recovery and staying healthy afterward.Dr Pankaj Jariwala, Interventional Cardiologist at Yashoda Hospitals, Hyderabad, explains that the early recovery phase is fragile.
The extent of damage determines how carefully the body needs to be managed.Dr Prabhat Kumar Dash, Director of Cardiology at PGMIR & Capital Hospital, Bhubaneswar, describes signs of good recovery, such as the absence of breathlessness and chest discomfort.Dr K Roshan Rao, Chief Interventional Cardiologist at Apollo Hospital, Indore, adds that returning to daily life depends on both the severity of the attack and the pace of recovery.This session brings out a reality often overlooked. Many patients return to old habits too soon. This increases the risk of another attack. The panel focuses on rehabilitation, medication discipline, and gradual lifestyle changes. Recovery is not just physical, it also involves emotional and financial adjustment.The TOI Cardio Medithon 5 does more than share medical knowledge. It changes how people see their own health. The heart does not suddenly fail. It responds to daily choices, food, movement, stress, and rest. The conversations remind people that small, consistent actions shape long-term health. And in a country where heart disease is striking earlier than ever, awareness is no longer optional. It is essential.

