50 years old with diabetes, high blood pressure and coronary heart disease, how long can I live?

How long a 50-year-old diabetic hypertensive patient with coronary artery disease can live depends on the severity of the disease, whether or not he receives standardized treatment, the specific circumstances vary from person to person, and the survival time cannot be determined. Most of the patients after active standardized treatment generally does not affect the life expectancy.
If patients actively control blood glucose and blood pressure to minimize damage to various target organs such as the heart and kidneys, life expectancy is generally not affected. Poor glycemic control may lead to serious complications such as ketoacidosis and hyperosmolar hyperglycemic syndrome. Poor blood pressure control may lead to serious complications such as cardiac infarction, cerebral infarction, cerebral hemorrhage, etc., which may lead to coma or even death if not treated in time.
For coronary heart disease, patients can follow the doctor’s advice to apply aspirin and other antiplatelet drugs for treatment, serious stenosis of coronary arteries should follow the doctor’s advice for percutaneous coronary intervention, etc., and at the same time, should actively control blood glucose and blood pressure, generally will not affect the life expectancy. If the patient is not standardized treatment, often in the form of acute myocardial infarction or malignant arrhythmia and other episodes, it is easy to lead to the patient’s death.
Suffering from diabetes hypertension coronary heart disease patients can live for a long time the key lies in whether to comply with the doctor’s instructions for standardized treatment, as well as whether to maintain a healthy lifestyle, so patients should maintain a good state of mind, as early as possible under the guidance of the doctor for standardized treatment. If the disease is well controlled, it will not affect the life expectancy too much.