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Know the Latest Recommendations to Protect Your Heart

Aug 23 08:10pm

When I came across these recommendations in the journal Circulation, I decided to provide them to my readers almost verbatim because they represent such a concise, yet sweeping, description of heart-healthy lifestyle measures, as well as the proper choices of foods and their preparation.

My own recommendations on how to implement them are in italics. See how many of these lifestyle and nutritional recommendations you already follow and how you can creatively incorporate others into your daily life.

Lifestyle recommendations:

--Know the calorie content of the foods and beverages you consume. Calories per serving are always listed on food labels. Always note the size of 1 serving.

--Track your weight, physical activity, and calorie intake. Remember: to maintain weight, calories taken in must equal calories burned.

--Prepare and eat smaller portions. Use smaller plates and avoid eating directly out of carryout containers. Chew your food. To fill up before a meal, drink a glass of water.

--When possible, decrease time spent watching television, surfing the Web, and playing computer games. Take an after-meal walk or play with the kids.

--Incorporate physical activity into habitual activities. Gardening, walking the dog, and vacuuming all qualify as physical activity.

--Do not smoke or use tobacco products. Ask your doctor to refer you to a program to help you quit.

--If you drink alcohol, limit daily intake to 1 drink for women and 2 drinks for men. If you don't' drink, don't start. The risks of excessive drinking outweigh any possible benefits.


Food choices and preparation recommendations:

--Use the nutrition-facts panel and ingredients list when choosing foods to buy. Be on the lookout for sodium, sugar, and fat content, particularly trans fats.

--Eat fresh, frozen, or canned vegetables and fruits without high-calorie sauces and added salt and sugars. Avoid high-fat cream sauces and toppings. Accustom your taste buds to less salt.

--Replace high-calorie foods with fruits and vegetables. You can eat a larger volume of fruits and vegetables than you can of higher-calorie foods.

--Eat beans, whole-grain products, fruits, and vegetables to increase fiber intake. Fiber will help you feel fuller, but drink plenty of water to avoid uncomfortable gas.

--Use liquid vegetable oils in place of solid fats. Solid fats like lard or shortenings contain large amounts of saturated fat; hydrogenated vegetable oils usually contain harmful trans fats.

--Limit beverages and foods high in added sugars from sucrose, glucose, maltose, dextrose, corn syrups, honey, and concentrated fruit juice. Know the various names of sugars and then substitute with no-sugar-added products.

--Cut back on pastries and high-calorie bakery products such as muffins and doughnuts. Eat a piece of raw fruit or a serving of low-fat flavored yogurt to satisfy your sweet tooth.

--Choose foods made with whole grains, such as whole wheat, oats/oatmeal, rye, barley, corn, popcorn, brown rice, wild rice, buckwheat, triticale, bulgar (cracked wheat), millet, quinoa, and sorghum. These foods are high in protein and fiber and can be used to replace animal protein.

--Select milk and dairy products that are either fat free or low fat. But be careful of added sugar.

--Use lean cuts of meat and remove skin from poultry before eating. To keep these foods low in fat, avoid frying them.

--Limit processed meats that are high in saturated fat and sodium. Sausage and luncheon meats are especially high in sodium.

--Grill, bake, or broil fish, meat, and poultry. And skip high-fat condiments like tartar sauce or cream sauces.

--Incorporate vegetable-based meat substitutes into favorite recipes. Tofu, tempeh and other forms of soy protein can be used alone or with vegetables in stir-fried dishes, as well as spaghetti and chili.

--Encourage the consumption of whole vegetables and fruits instead of juices. You'll get less sugar and more fiber.

--Reduce salt intake by choosing the processed foods and brands with less salt and by limiting condiments such as soy sauce and ketchup. Check the label for sodium content and aim for no more than 2,400 mg per day.


And my own addition:

--Avoid all foods containing trans fats. Trans fats aren't just found in most margarines but are also prevalent in many snack foods containing partially hydrogenated or hydrogenated products. These harmful fats have been shown to raise LDL (so-called bad) cholesterol and lower good HDL (so-called good) cholesterol, which increase the risk of developing heart disease.

38 Comments Report Abuse
11. heyeverybody49100 - Feb 04 09:21am
wow!! These information on here are great espeacially when you don't know anything about it and stuff

great information!!!!
12. alexisvics - Feb 04 11:00am
Good advice! What about coffee ? Does drinking coffee affect our LDL ?
13. worguchambers - Feb 04 12:27pm
Thanks so much indeed for these lifesaving tips even as one prays for the ability to put them into action especially the requirement for regular exercises considering the fast pace nature of today's life & living.
14. shoghaly111 - Feb 04 08:56pm
Try to make your family wake earlier in the morning, going to bed earlier. Use the energy of music to put some vigor in their body. Decrease their time of tele watching. shift to the channels of exercises. bring books at home about exercises, add in the favourites of the web surfer the sites highlighting physical activities. Regards
15. jake47302 - Feb 07 04:05am
Lets see if I've got this straight- Eat less, exercise more. What a scientific breakthrough!
16. jake47302 - Feb 07 04:06am
Lets see if I've got this straight- Eat less, exercise more. What a scientific breakthrough!
17. rgweir@verizon.net - Aug 24 07:49am
These recommendations may not make you live longer, but it will seem tat way.
18. donaison31 - Aug 26 11:02pm
have your chloresteral checked and be sure to get the results from a lab. report.
19. whirinthelight - Aug 27 04:28am
Sugar and salt aren't the enemy. Overuse of them are what's wrong. Using a sugar substitute is what's toxic. You can control your intake of sugar and salt by making more of your food homemade instead of buying everything prepackaged from the store. IT TASTES BETTER TOO. People who aren't sugar sensitive should not be turning to any food or drinks with sugar substitutes in the first place. It warps your tastebuds and makes you want things that are even sweeter than normal. It's unhealthy. Just look at how many people are able to drink a diet soda and eat something sweet at the same time. It's revolting. It's like they're drinking water with their food. They have no tastebuds left. Salt sensitive types, along with limiting their salt, should eat more fruits, vegetables, grains, raw nuts, and tea every day in their diet to get the extra potassium they need. Doing something simple as making your own popcorn in 1 Tbsp-2 Tbsp olive oil, heating just a little butter and olive oil together in a saucepan to top with, and salting to taste, can make a difference too. It tastes better than any microwave popcorn that's out there too. It's also healthier for you too.
20. klmonsour2004 - Aug 27 01:26pm
Hey Dr. M. just wondering what the dangers of botox are long term, if you think it's a good topic to address. A friend of mine is a model and has been getting botox injections since she was 26 - she's now 32...will this hurt her in the long term? She has a 4 y.o. daughter and is thinking about having another child, will this ever be an issue to child bearing women? Just curious.
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