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Cardio-Vascular Behavior Diet Exercise

A Simple Checklist To Avoid Heart Disease: Prevent Not Stent

2 years, 4 months ago

13542  0
Posted on Dec 01, 2021, 7 a.m.

Article courtesy of Dr. Joel Kahn, MD, who is a Clinical Professor of Medicine at Wayne State University School of Medicine, one of the world's top cardiologists, best-selling author, lecturer, and a leading expert in plant-based nutrition and holistic care.

Despite the pandemic, heart disease accounts for more deaths than any other class of ailment in the Western world. Yet, most cases have been judged to be preventable with a healthy diet and lifestyle adopted as early in life as possible.

Check this list to see how you may be harming your heart, and then set some heart-healthy intentions for 2022 in place!

1. Don't sit too much

Prolonged sitting is now firmly associated with heart disease and premature aging of arteries. In a study using heart CT scans and physical activity records of more than 2,000 adults living in Dallas, each hour of sitting per day was associated with a 14 percent increase in coronary artery calcification. Coronary calcification is a sign of damaged heart arteries and can increase the risk of a heart attack. Standing desks, apps, and timers are all necessary tools in today’s sedentary society.

2. Get restful sleep

Sleep is restorative and your pillow is the best anti-aging pill that exists. In a study that compared people sleeping poorly (and less than six hours a night) to those sleeping soundly for seven hours, the risk of coronary heart disease (clogged arteries) was shown to be 79 percent higher! Sleep more soundly in 2017 using mindfulness meditation, smartphone apps, or adaptogenic herbs.

3. Go to yoga

There are many benefits to yoga but one of the most powerful is spinal flexibility. Unknown to most are studies that flexibility of the spine correlates to the flexibility of important arteries in the body. My favorite practice for the spine is the 5 Tibetans which you can learn online with free video demonstrations.

4. Sweat

You can run but you can't hide from toxins in plastics, cosmetics, and food. Heavy metals like mercury and lead are particularly damaging to the heart and arteries. Some kind of sweating practice—as in exercise or better yet infrared sauna—can help eliminate toxins efficiently according to many research studies.

5. Have sex

Most sexual encounters raise the heart rate and blood pressure significantly. And fortunately, studies show that the more frequent the sex, the lower the risk of heart events. So get busy in 2017.

6. Avoid soda

If you are watching your weight by drinking a few cans of diet soda a day, you are trading evil for evil and increasing your risk of heart disease. A massive study showed that women that drink two or more diet sodas a day have a major increase in heart disease and death. Water, unsweetened tea, green juice, and black coffee should be the items on your list.

7. Get regular check-ups

You may be young and feel invincible, but even a healthy lifestyle does not make you immune to heart disease—beginning even in your teens and 20s. Along with lifestyle choices like diet, smoking, and exercise, there are genetic factors that play a role in heart health. See a health care provider to check your blood pressure, an EKG for your QT interval, and get lab work done for fasting glucose, vitamin D levels, a cholesterol panel, lipoprotein a and homocysteine measurements, and an assessment of inflammation by a test called hs-CRP. If you are over 40 with risks for heart disease, get a coronary artery calcium scan and know your score.

8. Quit smoking

Maybe it's too obvious to include this on the list, but smoking puts you on the fast track to a heart attack. And although smoking rates are dropping, about a quarter of millennials still smoke which is the highest percentage of any age group. Quit now.

9. Manage your stress

Stress has been linked to heart disease for decades and the introduction of smartphones and wi-fi hasn't made life any more relaxing. 24/7 isn't just a tag phrase but a credo for many young people, and the stress and accompanying adrenal fatigue can age arteries fast. Learn a few strategies to manage the stress that you can use on a daily basis and take a technology detox at least a few hours a week.

10. Avoid bacon, hot dogs, and pepperoni

The past few years have been a rough one for processed red meats, a food group that so many are in love with. In 2015 the World Health Organization announced definitive data that processed red meats cause cancer, especially colorectal cancer. Years before that the same foods were associated with a spike in heart disease and heart attacks. For the suffering of animals, the destruction of our planet, and for your heart: bypass the bacon.

Getting the public to focus on heart disease is a difficult task because it develops silently over years, often without warning. I remind people that just like wrinkles around the eyes, there are wrinkles of the heart arteries. But the aging of our heart can be measured and prevented, so keep this checklist on hand and make your heart health an important part of the year to come!

Test Not Guess and Prevent Not Stent.

About the author: At his core, Dr. Joel Kahn believes that plant-based nutrition is the most powerful source of preventative medicine on the planet. Having practiced traditional cardiology since 1983, it was only after his own commitment to a plant-based vegan diet that he truly began to delve into the realm of non-traditional diagnostic tools, prevention tactics, and nutrition-based recovery protocols. 

As with anything you read on the internet, this article should not be construed as medical advice; please talk to your doctor or primary care provider before making any changes to your wellness routine.

Content may be edited for style and length.

Materials provided by:

https://twitter.com/drjkahn

https://www.drjoelkahn.com/

https://www.kahnlongevitycenter.com/blog/a-simple-checklist-to-avoid-heart-disease-prevent-not-stent

http://www.acc.org/about-acc/press-releases/2015/03/05/16/19/study-bolsters-link-between-heart-disease-excessive-sitting?w_nav=S

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3198203/

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19666849

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22505948

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11812807

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/269637605_Diet_Drink_Consumption_and_the_Risk_of_Cardiovascular_Events_A_Report_from_the_Women%27s_Health_Initiative

https://www.mindbodygreen.com/0-12606/what-i-wish-everyone-knew-about-preventing-heart-disease.html

https://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/basic_information/health_effects/heart_disease/

https://www.mindbodygreen.com/0-16154/6-stress-busting-techniques-from-a-cardiologist.html

http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/121/21/2271



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