10 Tips for Heart Health.

10 Tips for Heart Health

Given that it’s largely preventable, heart disease, In reality, heart disease is the number-one killer worldwide. In the United States, it causes one in three deaths annually.
Granted, preventing heart disease is more complicated than consuming vitamin C to stop scurvy, and it will require changes, for many, in their diets and exercise routines. But they are not as hard as you think. Make heart health a priority by following these ten easy tips:
10 Tips for Heart Health
1. Maintain normal blood pressure. Hypertension, a condition that often goes untreated, is the biggest risk factor. If you’re on medication, stick with it, monitor blood pressure, and keep follow-up doctor’s appointments.
2. Stay away from tobacco smoke. It elevates the risk of heart disease by a factor of two to four. Far more smokers die of heart disease than lung disease.
3. Skip the sugar. Fats have been unfairly demonized, though the only one that seems to be really bad is man made trans fats (also called hydrogenated fats). A new study found that Americans consume more sugar than they ought to and that the higher the sugar intake the greater the risk of cardiovascular death. Substitute water or unsweetened herb tea for sodas and juice. Have fruit instead of candy and baked good. If you steer clear of processed foods (vehicles for sugar, refined carbs, and trans fats), you’ll be fine.
4. Eat real food–vegetables, fruit, nuts, and moderate amounts of whole grains. A weekly serving of fatty fish, which is rich in omega-3 fatty acids, reduces the risk of fatal coronary heart disease. Supplementation with fish oil may protect against cardiac death in people with heart disease.
5. Get off the couch! While physical inactivity inflates the heart disease risk, regular exercise reduces it. Heroics are not required. One study judged brisk walking equivalent to running in reducing three conditions that elevate heart disease risk: hypertension, elevated blood cholesterol, and diabetes.
6. Go outdoors. Sunlight’s ultraviolet light triggers the skin’s vitamin D production and seems to affect arteries to lower blood pressure. Ten-to-fifteen-minute exposures make plenty of vitamin D. Although low vitamin D levels have been linked with cardiovascular disease, the evidence that supplementation might reduce heart disease risk remains inconclusive.
7. Get a grip on stress. Stressing out elevates hormones such as epinephrine (a.k.a., adrenaline) and cortisol. As a result, heart rate and blood pressure climb, platelets become stickier (increasing the risk of clots within blood vessels), and blood glucose increases. Over time, the risk rises for heart disease and associated conditions such as atherosclerosis, hypertension, and diabetes.
8. Sleep sufficiently. Studies link overwork and insufficient sleep with great odds of cardiovascular disease and heart attack.
9. Maintain a healthy weight. Being overweight or obese can hurt the heart. Eating light, staying active, sleeping enough, and avoiding undue stress all help.
10. Use heart-friendly culinary herbs and spices in lieu of salt, which can increase blood pressure. Italian seasonings such as oregano, thyme, and rosemary are high in antioxidants, which counter oxidative stress (a risk factor for heart disease and many other diseases). Garlic has a number of cardiovascular benefits. It may lower LDL cholesterol (and definitely protects it from oxidizing), normalizes high blood pressure, and inhibits platelets from clotting. more  

Post a Comment

Related Posts

    • New Covid vaccines

      https://www.localc...

      By Sudesh Rai
      /
    • Covid is the trigger

      Covid isn’t a single event. It’s a trigger. It triggers new medical conditions. Preexisting conditions are exacerbated. It reactivates latent viruses. You age decades. Dysfunctional imm...

      By Anita Gupta
      /
    • Long Covid symptoms (neurological)

      Most common symptoms of the post-COVID-19 neurologic syndrome reported from 3,762 participants were as follows. LocalCircles must check with people with long covid in India as to what they are expe...

      By Malvika N
      /
    • The only race is of survival

      My close friend (40) who died this week in Melbourne had covid 3 times. The first time wasn’t so bad, the second one knocked him around pretty badly, and the third time he died of it. We&rsqu...

      By Irene Willems
      /
    • Events happening

      Whether it is business or social events, they are happening across the country though cases are rising. Business media houses are organising them. Why is it that the desire to make money is so much...

      By Sangita Baruah
      /
    • By Nikita Goyal
      /
    • Supreme Court says vaccine not mandatory

      The Supreme Court today held so as no substantial data has been produced on record to show that the risk of transmission of COVID-19 virus from the unvaccinated persons are higher than from vaccina...

      By Shailesh Deshmukh
      /
    • Science vs Politics

      With BA.4 and BA.5 on the horizon and liver problems on the rise, we are soon to have an epic battle of science vs. politics in most countries around the world. Most politicians have dr...

      By Shikha Mittal
      /
    • Discipline

      Devil's advocate argument is that government could be wanting to make wearing a mask a habit among people, and those driving around have a greater responsibility, especially the affluent, in this c...

      By Ashish Rai
      /
    • Vaccines not much helpful post Omicron infections

      The additive benefit of vaccination with Omicron infection for neutralizing antibodies as compared with infection alone is much lower anticipated protection across all variants, including Omicron i...

      By Harsimran Kaur
      /
    • Open up booster for 45+ instead of 60+

      Last year in March, when the vaccination was opened up for the common citizens, it was for the age of 45 and above. All those above 45 (including 60+) living in a house, who wanted to get vaccinate...

      By Padmanabhan G
      /
Share
Enter your email and mobile number and we will send you the instructions

Note - The email can sometime gets delivered to the spam folder, so the instruction will be send to your mobile as well

All My Circles
Invite to
(Maximum 500 email ids allowed.)