Archive for the ‘ Heart Disease ’ Category

Supporting High Cholesterol and Triglycerides Through Diet, and Lifestyle Changes for Heart Health

High cholesterol is often associated with an increased risk towards coronary artery disease, heart disease, and stroke. The World Health Organization estimates that almost 20% of all strokes and over 50% of all heart attacks can be linked to high cholesterol, with these numbers rising every year. There are also estimates that over 50% of all Americans have cholesterol levels above the suggested limit.

Conventional medicine recommends and incorporates the use of statin drugs in order to lower elevated cholesterol levels. For many people, it is difficult to lower their cholesterol through diet and exercise alone, and they resort to these medications. Unfortunately, statin drugs are often accompanied by a variety of side effects that many patients wish to avoid. Side effects of statin drug use typically include: headaches, muscle pains, diarrhea, fatigue, and weakness. In rare occasions, more severe side effects include neurological degeneration, depression, weight gain, liver stress, and memory loss to name a few.

In 1953, Dr. Ancel Keys published a paper titled “Atherosclerosis, a Problem in Newer Public Health” where he hypothesized that there was a correlation between high dietary fat intake and death rates from cardiovascular disease based on the data he accumulated from seven countries. Keys’s studies were later criticized for excluding data from any countries that did not support his theories. There was data available for 22 countries, and when the full picture was looked at, there was found to be no relationship between dietary fat consumption, high cholesterol levels and heart disease.

According to Harvard School of Public Health, in the 1960s, fats and oils supplied Americans with about 45 percent of their calories; about 13 percent of us were obese and under 1 percent had type 2 diabetes. Today, Americans take in less fat, getting about 33 percent of calories from fats and oils; yet 34 percent of us are obese and 8 percent have diabetes, most with type 2 diabetes.

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Diet and Natural Treatments for Atherosclerosis Heart Disease and Reversing Atherosclerosis

Atherosclerosis heart disease begins at your blood vessel’s endothelia, which are thin cell sheets vulnerable to injury. From their cell membranes fatty acid metabolites are produced and coordinate vessel wall stability and help protect against atherosclerosis. Oxidation by products of the fatty foods we consume threaten endothelial integrity. Dietary fatty acids protected by dietary antioxidants can slow and help in reversing atherosclerosis.

High doses of any one of the 3, 6 or 9 essential fatty acids (EFAs) can create deficiencies of the others. As natural treatments for atherosclerosis heart disease and reversing atherosclerosis, a diversified intake of fatty acids should only be undertaken in conjunction with a generous intake of antioxidants. Uncontrolled free radical attacks tend to fuel pro-atherosclerotic tendencies, where as favorable fatty acid antioxidant interactions tend to retard atherosclerosis initiation and progression.

Vitamin E, a lipid soluble vitamin, is a potent antioxidant. Several epidemiological studies have demonstrated positive relationships between vitamin E intake and the prevention of atherosclerosis heart disease and reversing atherosclerosis.

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