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9 Easy Heart Health Hacks For February

Written by Wellness Club on February 26, 2018 – 2:22 pm -

By Nurse Mark

It’s Heart Health month again, and a healthy heart and circulatory system, all those miles of veins and arteries, doesn’t have to be difficult. Let’s look at some simple things you can do to improve and ensure your best possible cardiovascular health.

Remember a time when you had absolutely no worries about your heart?

As a younger person in your 20′s or 30′s you just knew that heart disease was not an issue for you. Your life wasn’t focused around living close to a hospital, avoiding physical activity out of fear of chest pain or worse, or even thinking at all about your heart, which just ticked along perfectly from day to day, week to week, and year to year.

Would you like to return to that liberated, confident feeling, knowing that your heart is healthy, and enjoying the physical and emotional freedom that dependable, healthy heart function brings?

Why not give yourself the gift of healthy heart confidence by following these simple, proven, protective measures that can lower your risk of heart disease to that of a 20-year-old? Your heart is a very forgiving muscle and can be rejuvenated. Here’s how:

  1. Stop smoking. Most of our readers already know that smoking is one of the single biggest causes of heart disease. But if you do still smoke and you need a good reason to quit, dramatically lowering your risk of heart disease should be that reason!
  2. Eat a heart-healthy diet. High carbohydrate diets lead to overweight and high blood sugar levels, and diabetes. As you continue to read this list, you’ll see that these factors are each independent risk factors for heart disease. A VLC diet (Very Low Carbohydrate diet), high in Omega-3 Essential Fatty Acids, is the fastest, surest way to lower insulin and blood sugar levels, lose weight, decrease dangerous inflammation and slash heart disease risk at least four-fold. Diets higher in “good fats” (NOT low-fat diets!) and low in carbs have proven to be the heart-healthiest. Carbs means all starches, grains, pastas, and so on, even the ones promoted as “healthy.” And sugars – there are NO “healthy sugars” – surely you have read our article “But I Only Use Organic Natural Sugars!”
  3. Get optimal doses of heart-healthy nutrients. Many nutrients essential to healthy heart function are often missing in the Standard American Diet (S.A.D.). Maxi Multi is the best Optimal Dose Daily Multiple Vitamin available and will provide proper amounts of vitamins minerals, and trace minerals to keep you and your heart healthy. Maxi Multi includes optimal daily amounts of the following heart-health essentials:
    • B complex vitamins, needed for normal nerve function and homocysteine levels.
    • magnesium, the relaxing, anti-arrhythmic mineral that is absolutely necessary for normal heart function. Unfortunately, magnesium is one of the most common nutrient deficiencies in the S.A.D. diet.
    • antioxidant nutrients (especially vitamins C, E, and beta-carotene). Studies have shown that people with higher blood levels of antioxidants have a lower incidence of heart disease. Among people who have a heart attack, higher levels of antioxidants decrease free radical formation and reduce heart damage.

    Other Heart-Health supplements include:

    • Omega-3 fatty acids (fish oils) are so well-known to decrease inflammation and heart arrhythmias that the FDA now allows Heart Health label claims for fish oil. Allopathic cardiologists now also have an incredibly expensive prescription fish oil for their heart patients – many of whom would have less stress on their hearts if they bought over-the-counter fish oil for $20 instead of prescription for $200!
    • soluble fiber helps keep blood fats, including cholesterol, at a happy level, although high cholesterol is not the big heart disease risk factor it has been portrayed to be by Big Pharma.
    • Berberine is emerging as a highly valuable herb for heart health – we have patients who tell us it has quelled long-standing heart arrhythmias (palpitations) that have resisted every other drug tried by their conventional doctors. Learn more about this amazing herb here: Berberine: The “Swiss Army Knife” Of Supplements
    • Vitamin K: A large European study, The Rotterdam Study, has shown that even modest amounts of vitamin K2 fight heart disease by controlling calcium-regulating proteins in vascular tissue, which helps to keep calcium out of the arteries(and in the bones where it belongs) and thus prevents the formation of dangerous calcified plaques.
    • CoQ10 is beneficial for nearly every type of Heart Disease (angina, arrhythmia, atherosclerosis, cardiomyopathy, heart failure, congestive heart failure, and myocardial infarction and we consider it an essential part of any heart-health maintenance or improvement program. Are you taking statin drugs for cholesterol? Then you must take C0Q10 as statin drugs seriously deplete the body’s natural CoQ10!
  4. Increase physical activity. If you don’t use it, you’ll lose it. Make your heart work harder than just getting up from your easy chair and going to the refrigerator once in a while. This doesn’t mean you need to train for a marathon. As little as ten minutes of brisk walking per day, especially if this is more than you currently do, will improve heart function. New to exercising? Start easy, work up.
  5. Lower body-wide inflammation. Subtle inflammation, as measured by a hs-CRP test (“highly sensitive C-Reactive Protein”, a simple blood test), is a more sensitive measure of heart disease risk than cholesterol or other elevated blood fats. This type of inflammation, which is often so minor that you may not feel it but which irritates the blood vessel lining and sets the atherosclerotic process in motion, can be corrected by simple diet changes, nutritional supplements and anti-inflammatory herbs. Decreasing inflammation also lowers your risk of cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer’s and other “age related” diseases. hs-CRP and a number of other important cardiovascular health markers can be tested with Dr. Myatt’s OptiPlus test panel.
  6. Lower your blood pressure naturally. There’s a lot of evidence that higher blood pressures (especially systolic B.P.’s consistently over 140) are associated with higher risk of heart disease. But, there are a number of big, long-range studies which show NO BENEFIT to lowering B.P. with drugs. People with “normal” blood pressures who were only “normal” because of medications are still at significantly higher risk of heart disease. As naturopathic as this conclusion sounds, these studies point to the fact that lowering blood pressure naturally, by correcting the cause of the elevation, is life-saving where chemical control is not.
  7. Curb depression, anxiety and stress. The emotional factor doesn’t get much “press” or discussion in the cardiologists office, but there are numerous studies showing that negative emotional states increase subtle inflammation. Possibly because depression and stress (or more accurately described as our reaction to stress) increase inflammation, these emotional states are associated with higher risk of heart disease and poorer prognosis in people with already-existing heart disease or who are recovering from heart surgery. If you suffer from depression, be sure to get help. And remember that depression isn’t caused by a Prozac deficiency!
  8. Lower high blood sugar levels. High blood sugar levels, high insulin levels or outright type II diabetes are major risk factors for heart disease. The sad part of this connection is that type II diabetes is almost always correctable through diet alone, usually in under three months. Even more sadly, I find that many diabetics prefer to live with the risk (and worry about their risks), rather than make a few healthy diet changes that would erase this major danger. Go figure.
  9. Achieve and maintain a normal weight. Overweight increases subtle inflammation, which as you should know by now (if you’ve been paying attention!) is an important risk factor for not only heart disease but also cancer, arthritis, Alzheimer’s and more. When an overweight person loses weight, their hs-CRP (that inflammatory marker) also comes down, corresponding to a lower heart disease risk. Of course, the low-carb, high Omega-3 fat diet that lowers blood sugar and corrects diabetes also leads to weight loss, making it easy to correct several problems at once through diet changes alone.

These same measures that dramatically lower your risk of heart disease also increase natural immunity, slash your risk of cancer, diabetes, arthritis, depression, Alzheimer’s and senile dementia and a host of other diseases that we fall prey to with age. Even at advanced age or stages of disease, much improvement and protection is possible (in other words, you can reclaim a lot of healthy ground), by turning a few habits around in a healthier direction.

Are you worried about your heart and want to know more about how you can live better and longer with a healthy heart? Consider starting your journey to heart-happiness with a Brief Telephone Consultation with Dr. Myatt!

 

References:

Lydia A. Bazzano, MD, PhD, MPH et.al. Effects of Low-Carbohydrate and Low-Fat Diets: A Randomized Trial, 2 September 2014

http://annals.org/aim/article-abstract/1900694/effects-low-carbohydrate-low-fat-diets-randomized-trial

Geleijnse JM, Vermeer C, Grobbee DE, et al. Dietary intake of menaquinone is associated with a reduced risk of coronary heart disease: the Rotterdam Study. J Nutr. 2004 Nov;134(11):3100-5.

https://academic.oup.com/jn/article/134/11/3100/4688389

Additional references are found on linked pages.

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