MEN'S HEART DISEASE: RISKS INCREASE AROUND AGE 35 Most guys don’t start thinking about heart disease until they’re well into their forties or fifties—if ever. But new research from Northwestern University is sounding the alarm: for men, the risk of heart disease starts climbing much earlier, with a sharp uptick beginning around age 35. That’s years before most men set foot in a doctor’s office for a heart health screening. A decades-long study following thousands of adults found that men reach a 5% risk of cardiovascular disease about seven years earlier than women. The main culprit? Coronary heart disease is the same condition behind most heart attacks. By their mid-30s, men’s risk starts to pull ahead of women’s and continues to rise through middle age. And here’s the kicker: this early surge isn’t explained by smoking, high blood pressure, or diabetes alone. There’s something else at play—likely a mix of biology and lifestyle. So why does this gap stubbornly persist, even as m...