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Posts Tagged ‘Heart Health’

The Benefits of Exercise

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

We know the importance of living a healthy way of life, eating a healthy diet and exercising can help us to look after our heart and ward off heart disease and other major illnesses. Having a daily exercise plan will also leave you feeling less tired and stressed and can also make you feel happier.

Exercise is physical activity that is configured and is prepared at certain intensity for a certain length of time. We take on in physical activity for health advantages if we wish to avoid disease and delay death. We take on in physical activity for fitness benefits in order to develop some components of physical fitness like cardiorespiratory endurance, flexibility, muscle endurance, muscle strength, and body composition.

Exercise such as walking can help you reduce the risk of developing brittle bones later in life and help with problems such as constipation, menstrual problems and pre menstrual problems.

Benefits to your health in the long term are numerous, exercising for as little as 30 minutes per day 5 days a week will reduce the risk of heart disease, cancer and the development of diabetes. It can also have a positive effect on people who suffer from high blood pressure, often helping to bring it lower.

Research has proved that any amount of exercise, at any age, is beneficial. And, in general, the more you do, the greater the benefits. Physical activity is an essential ingredient of any weight-loss program, to get the most out of your fat loss while keeping valuable muscle mass. But exercise has many other health and longevity benefits. It can help avoid or improve these conditions:

Type II Diabetes. This disease is increasing at alarming rates and 17 million Americans now have it. Physical activity can develop weight loss and help stop and/or control this condition. Losing weight can boost insulin sensitivity, develop blood sugar and cholesterol levels, and decrease blood pressure – all of which are very significant to the health of people with diabetes.

Stroke. In an analysis of studies, researchers found that being active decreases your risk of having and dying from a stroke. Moderately active study participants had 20% less risk of stroke than less active participants.

Heart Disease. Regular activity fortifies your heart muscle; increases “good” cholesterol; lowers blood pressure and lowers “bad” cholesterol; enhances blood flow; and helps your heart function more efficiently. All of these benefits lessen the risk of heart disease, stroke, and high blood pressure.

Keeping your Heart Healthy

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Heart disease is a word that covers a variety of conditions that concern the performance of the heart; the most common of these is ischemic heart disease, this occurs when there is inadequate blood supply to the heart which is usually caused by fatty deposits building up in the vessels that supply the blood to the heart.

If you have heart disease, all the “healthy-heart suggestions” apply more to you than to other people. No matter what sort of heart disease you have, your general level of physical fitness will find out how well your heart can give back. Also, you’re perhaps at risk of developing heart disease, such as high blood pressure or coronary artery disease, just like other people your age. That’s why you must eat a balanced diet, keep up a reasonable body weight and stay at least moderately active physically.

One of the most significant things that you can do to uphold your health is to learn about your heart disease. Don’t rely on your parents, primary care doctor or someone else to do this for you. Think about your heart disease before having herbal preparations, taking any over-the-counter medications, vitamins, or prescription medications or before having any medical or surgical procedures. Discuss any possible cardiac side effects or drug contacts with your primary care physician, pharmacist or cardiologist.

Living a healthy way of life which consists of eating a right healthy diet and exercise will help lessen the risk of heart diseases, being vigorous and having a daily exercise routine is the best way to keep the heart healthy.

Lack of physical activity is notion to cause over a third of all deaths from heart disease, it is recommended by health experts that we should have 30 minutes of moderate exercise at least 5 days out of 7. Make physical activity part of your every day life. Physical activity fortifies your heart, lungs and muscles. Regular exercise will also help you maintain a healthy weight.

Choose lower fat foods, including fish, poultry, lean meats and lower fat dairy products. Use small amounts of added fats like butter, margarine, salad dressings, oil and fat spreads. Eat more foods with soluble fiber such as lentils, dried beans, oat bran, peas, apples, strawberries and citrus fruits, which contain pectin. Soluble fiber helps to lower blood cholesterol.

Eating in excess of salt can make your body retain fluid, increase your blood pressure and make your heart work harder. Cook with very little salt and use none at the table. Use spices and herbs to flavor foods instead of salt.

Learn to manage the stress in your life. Ask yourself what you can perform to keep it all together in your work and personal life. Learn relaxation techniques and try to laugh every day. Find ways to take greater manage over your work and life.

Fat Makes Fat People

Friday, August 7th, 2009

fatDo you have problem with your weight? At a time millions of people go hungry from childhood to old age; people who number about one-third of the world’s population eat three-quarters of the world’s food.

The three classes of foods that provide energy are proteins, carbohydrates and fats. A gram of protein or of carbohydrate yields 16.7 kilojoules of food fuel. In other words, the fat you add to your food is high-octane fuel and consequently runs up the kilojoules fast.

Fat can be either liquid or solid. The fats that are liquid at room temperature we usually call oils. All fats are made up of three fatty acids joined to one molecule of glycerin. The reason some fats as margarine, lard, or butter are solid at room temperature and oils are liquid is because of the kind of fatty acid they contain. Fats with a large proportion of saturated, or stiff fatty acids, are firm. But regardless of the kind of fat or food energy you consume, the surplus is converted to body far made up largely of saturated, or solid, fatty acids. This is as at should be, otherwise in warm weather, your fat would turn liquid and you would just slush around like a bag of oil.  So would all land animals. For this reason animal fats are hard. So, then of you eat freely of foods containing animal fats, your fat intake will be largely of the saturated type, plus considerable cholesterol which is present in all animal fats.

But oils can be made hard by hydrogenation a process which causes the unsaturated fatty acids of the oils take on more hydrogen and so become saturated, or hard, as is done in the manufacture of shortenings and margarine. Hard fats of any kind tend to raise blood cholesterol, but not to the same degree. Some newer type margarine is only lightly hydrogenated and has little effect on the cholesterol level. High levels of cholesterol in the blood are associated with a high increase in the incidence of coronary artery disease and stroke.

You may think you don’t use much fat. You may not, but again, you may be using more than you think. Fats are divided into visible and invisible kinds, and you may be consuming more fat hidden in foods than you realize. Visible fat is fat or oil such as you use on your table or in the preparation of food. When you make a sandwich or salad, the mayonnaise, dressing, butter or margarine you add is visible fat.  So is the fat or oil the baker adds to the flour to make bread, pie crust or cake.

Invisible fat on the other hand is fat inherent in the food. Nearly all foods contain some invisible fat. The germ of grains, certain oily seeds, nuts and olives contain from moderate to large amounts, mainly in a highly unsaturated form. Animal foods, as meat, milk and eggs, are also high in invisible fats, largely of the hard or saturated kind. By eating freely of foods high in fat, visible or invisible, we greatly increase our energy intake.

If you are having a problem with excess weight, the simplest and easiest way to control it is to cut down on the concentrated foods. There are the fats, the sugars, and the foods containing generous quantities of sugar and fat, mainly the rich desserts. If eaten at all, these should be used only sparingly by anyone to cut down weight.

The problems of overweight are serious. For every 2.5 kilograms of weight, your body must provide an additional 4.8 kilometers of blood vessels to circulate blood through this fatty tissue. If you are nine kilograms overweight your heart must push blood through 19 extra kilometers of blood vessels, day and night. This increased work load is the reason overweight is frequently associated with high blood pressure. It is also associated with high blood cholesterol and with an increased liability to stroke, coronary heart disease and diabetes.

To be overweight is more than an inconvenience. Every excess of 500 grams shortens life expectancy by one percent. This means that if you are 30 years of age and would normally live another 40 years or to the age of 70; if you are 14 kilograms overweight you are risking death 12 years earlier, or at the age of 58. If you are 22 kilograms over weight at the age 30, you are risking 20 years of your life, or death at the age of 50. So you can readily see that overweight is a real life shortener.

While coronary heart disease and stroke is the greatest killer in technologically developed countries, cancer follows close behind as second in line. The occurrence of every type of cancer is more frequent in those who suffer from overweight than in those who do not.

Is Vegetarianism Finally The Way To Go?

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

VeggieIs vegetarianism really viable or is it a fad?

More and more people are moving toward a vegetarian diet. Many national and international groups – heart associations, diabetic associations, cancer groups – are recommending that we eat more whole grains, legumes, fruits and vegetables.

They also suggest that we should cut down on meals, particularly red meals. Some are recommending poultry and fish as alternatives to red meat. Fish have wholly polyunsaturated fat whereas red meats have highly toward more vegetarianism.

Is it possible to get the necessary nutrients and the right balance of carbohydrates, protein and fat as a vegetarian?

For carbohydrates, a vegetarian diet is the best, especially for fiber – the neglected nutrient, as some call it. You can’t get fiber in any animal products. As for fat, any animal products generally have too much, and of the wrong type. The vegetarian diet has less fat and of a better kind.

Vitamins and mineral generally are considerably more abundant in fruits, whole grains and vegetables than in meats. And if you’re eating grains and legumes, the protein quality is as good as from animal sources. In fact, it’s difficult not to get sufficient protein in the diet unless you’re on a weight reducing program.

Health experts used to say a vegetarian child couldn’t get adequate protein. Has there been a shift in understanding?

At the turn of the century the daily protein requirement was believed to be about 120 grams. The recommendation now is about 60 grams for women and 70 grams for men. But you actually can get by with as little as 25 or 30 grams of high-quality protein.

I’ve heard about several positive aspects of vegetarianism. Are there any major cautions about a vegetarian diet?

If you suddenly start eating a lot of beans, for example, you may develop gas and cramping. Also, studies show that meat-eaters, when put onto a high-fiber vegetarian diet for two or three weeks, may develop a temporary imbalance of several minerals. However, long-term vegetarians don’t show such an imbalance. This implies that it takes some months for the body to adjust to a high-fiber vegetarian diet.

Some people say that vegetarians tend to eat more sugar. Have you found that to be so?

We seem to have an appetite for sweet things. But you can do two things.

First, you can train your palate. You can invoke what is called “cerebral override.” Actually, you can easily get by with only one half or one third the amount of sugar called for in recipes. Once you’re used to less sugar, the original recipe will be nauseating.

Second, there are sweet foods that are healthful. At our cooking schools we occasionally use concentrated apple juice, pineapple juice, dates and various dried fruit. They’re sweet, but used sensibly there’s no problem. It’s only when we eat such foods in large quantities or between meals that we run into problems.