Hormones and heart health Posted by Mike Furci (03/10/2011 @ 9:31 am) If you had to rank the most important factors for a healthy heart, hormones would likely show up last on your list. But the truth is that these chemical messengers have a strong influence on just about every single one of your body’s delicate systems… and your cardiovascular system is no exception. You may not realize it, but your blood vessels are lined with estrogen receptors, which play a key role in regulating healthy blood pressure, cholesterol and normal clot formation in both men and women.1 This may be one reason why pre-menopausal women enjoy more optimal heart health statistics than their male and postmenopausal counterparts—and why heart health becomes an important focus for women as they grow older. Read The full article Posted in: Anti-Aging, Cholesterol levels, Heart disease, Hormone replacement, Medical Issues for Men, Testosterone, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: American heart association, antiestrogen supplements, Cardiovascular Disease, cause of low testosterone, causes of cardiovascular disease, definition of cardiovascular disease, Diet and testosterone, estrogen, Headlines, Heart disease, heart disease risk factor, how to prevent heart disease, Low testosterone, oral hygiene and cardiovascular disease, periodontal disease and cardiovascular disease, phytoestrogens, phytoestrons and testosterone, prevent heart disease, symtoms of heart disease, Testosterone, Testosterone boosters, Testosterone levels, Testosterone levels in cardiovascular disease, Testosterone supplements, Testosterone supplements that boost muscle and sex drive, what causes heart disease
Cholesterol no longer a risk factor for heart disease. Look to CRP? Posted by Mike Furci (04/29/2010 @ 12:35 pm) Dr. James Stein, MD from the University of Wisconsin Medical School in Madison, praised the JUPITER study for exposing the fact that current therapeutic LDL-cholesterol levels are not only arbitrary, but are in fact a poor indicator of cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. ?Most patients with heart attacks have normal cholesterol values,? he stated. With the cholesterol theory crumbling the industry is under intense pressure to come up with a new risk factor, and one that can be treated with the same statin drugs they have invested so much money in. Enter Dr. Ridker and C-reactive protein (CRP). Ridker has been pushing treating CRP with statins for years. But is CRP a risk factor? A National Panel on CRP found no evidence treating CRP levels will improve survival rates (www.urmc.rochester.edu/pr/News/story.cfm?id=182). Elevated CRP levels are associated with many things including; anger, stress, arthritis, cancer, lupus, pneumonia, TB, oral contraceptive use, pregnancy, heart attacks, surgery, trauma, intense exercise, etc. It?s a marker for disease, not the cause. But since statins lower CRP levels slightly, you can count on CRP becoming the new cholesterol. The public will be made to fear CRP, be tested for it, and be put on dangerous statins to lower it. What a racket. Posted in: Cholesterol, Cholesterol levels, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: adverse effects of statins, American heart association, animal fat and cholesterol, Bad Cholesterol, Cardiovascular Disease, cardiovascular disease facts, cardiovascular disease types, causes of cardiovascular disease, Cholesterol, cholesterol drugs, Cholesterol Levels, coronary heart disease, CRP levels, decreasing your cholesterol, definition of cardiovascular disease, elevated crp blood levels, foods that fight heart disease, Good Cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, Headlines, heart, heart attack, Heart disease, heart disease information, heart disease prevention, heart disease risk factor, how to prevent heart disease, increased risks with statins, independent risk factors for heart disease, LDL cholesterol, lupus, prevent heart disease, saturated fat and cholesterol, statin benefits, Statin side effects, Statins, statins benefits versus risks, symtoms of heart disease, treating high cholesterol, types of heart disease, what causes heart disease
Lower fat means higher CVD risk Posted by Mike Furci (02/20/2010 @ 7:10 pm) Coronary heart disease is associated with diet. Nutritional recommendations are frequently provided, but few long term studies on the effect of food choices on heart disease are available. We followed coronary heart disease morbidity and mortality in a cohort of 1752 rural men participating in a prospective observational study. Dietary choices were assessed at baseline with a food questionnaire. 138 men were hospitalized or deceased owing to coronary heart disease during the 12 year follow-up. Daily intake of fruit and vegetables was associated with a lower risk of coronary heart disease when combined with a high dairy fat consumption, but not when combined with a low dairy fat consumption. Consuming wholemeal bread or eating fish at least twice a week showed no association with the outcome. Food Choices and Coronary Heart Disease: A Population Based Cohort Study of Rural Swedish Men with 12 Years of Follow-up Posted in: Anti-Aging, Foods products, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Nutrition Tags: Cardiovascular Disease, cardiovascular disease facts, cardiovascular disease risks, cardiovascular disease types, causes of cardiovascular disease, coronary heart disease, CVD, definition of cardiovascular disease, facts about heart disease, foods that fight heart disease, heart disease information, heart disease prevention, heart disease risk factor, how to prevent heart disease, incidnce of CVD, independent risk factors for heart disease, Obesity and cardiovascular disease, prevent heart disease, Saturated fat, saturated fat and cardiovascular disease, saturated fat and cholesterol, Saturated fat consumption, symtoms of heart disease, types of heart disease, what causes heart disease, what is cardiovascular disease
Sleep can help or hinder Posted by Mike Furci (01/25/2010 @ 9:46 am) Too much or too little sleep can boost your risk of death, British researchers report. “In terms of prevention, our findings indicate that consistently sleeping seven or eight hours a night is optimal for health,” study author Jane E. Ferrie, of University College London Medical School, said in a prepared statement. Her team studied more than 8,000 people, aged 35 to 55, who were followed for a number of years. Among participants who slept six, seven or eight hours a night at the start of the study, a decrease in nightly sleep duration was associated with a 110 percent excess risk of cardiovascular-related death. Similarly, among those who slept seven or eight hours per night at the start of the study, an increase in nightly sleep duration was associated with a 110 percent excess risk of non-cardiovascular death. The study appears in the Dec. 1 issue of Sleep. On average, most adults need seven to eight hours of sleep per night to feel well-rested and alert, according to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. Posted in: Anti-Aging, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: cant sleep, Cardiovascular Disease, cardiovascular disease facts, cardiovascular disease risks, causes of cardiovascular disease, causes of high blood pressure, definition of cardiovascular disease, help reduce high blood pressure, high blood pressure, high blood pressure and treatment, high blood pressure causes, high blood pressure cures, high blood pressure remedy, high blood pressure signs and symptoms, high blood pressure symptoms, high blood pressure treatments, how do you sleep, hypertension, hypertension medications, hypertension signs symptoms, hypertension symptoms, info on high blood pressure, natural remedies for high blood pressure, reducing high blood pressure, signs of high blood pressure, sleep, sleep apnea, sleep apnea treatment, sleep assault, sleep deprivation, sleep disorders, sleep number bed, sleep number bed complaints, sleep study, stages of sleep, symptoms of high blood pressure, what causes high blood pressure, what is cardiovascular disease, what is hypertensive cardiovascular disease
Vegetables and heart disease Posted by Mike Furci (12/10/2009 @ 6:51 pm) An analysis of the Prospect ? EPIC cohort, which consisted of 16057 post menopausal women between the ages of 49 ? 70, found vitamin K reduces the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). None of the participants had CVD at the start of the study. Those who got their vitamin K by eating leafy green vegetables had the same risk of CVD as the general population. Those who obtained their vitamin K by eating whole eggs, cheese, goose liver, and animal fats had a substantially reduced incidence of CVD when compared to the general population. (Wise Traditions 2009;10(2):11) Posted in: Diets, Foods products, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Nutrition, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: Cardiovascular Disease, cardiovascular disease facts, cardiovascular disease risks, causes of cardiovascular disease, definition of cardiovascular disease, foods high in vitamin k, Headlines, list of foods high in vitamin k, saturated fat and cardiovascular disease, vitamin k, vitamin k benefits, vitamin k food list, vitamin k foods, Weston A. Price, westonaprice.com, what is cardiovascular disease, Wise Traditions
|