Print This Article Post Comment Add To Favorites Email to Friends Ezine Ready

Food And Heart Disease

By: Eric Timmy Home | Health-and-Fitness


According to the American Heart Association, heart disease is the nation's single leading cause of death for both men and women. At least 58.8 million people in this country suffer from some form of heart disease. Men have a greater risk of heart attack than women do, and they have attacks earlier in life. Even after menopause, when women's death rate from heart disease increases, it's not as great as men's. But the good news is that measures can be taken to prevent heart disease. Studies show that nearly everyone can become more heart healthy by following a few key steps, such as eating a healthy diet, exercising, quitting smoking, and maintaining a healthy body weight.

The American Heart Association has identified several risk factors. Some of them can be modified, treated or controlled, and some can't. The more risk factors you have, the greater your chance of developing coronary heart disease. Also, the greater the level of each risk factor, the greater the risk. For example, a person with a total cholesterol of 300 mg/dL has a greater risk than someone with a total cholesterol of 245 mg/dL, even though everyone with a total cholesterol greater than 240 is considered high-risk.

Food has a powerful influence on health. What you eat, interacting with other risk factors, substantially determines the development of coronary heart disease. The principal components of food are fat, carbohydrate, protein, fiber, vitamins and minerals. The goals of a heart-healthy diet are to eat foods that help obtain or maintain healthy levels of cholesterol and lipids (fatty molecules) by achieving the following:

ท Reducing overall cholesterol levels and low-density lipoproteins (LDL), which are harmful to the heart.

ท Increasing high-density lipoproteins (HDL), which are beneficial for the heart.

ท Reducing other harmful lipids (fatty molecules), such as tri-glycerides and lipoprotein(a).



Article Source: http://www.eArticlesOnline.com

About the Author:
Read more article at Heart Diet Center

Tags: , , , , , ,

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Health-and-Fitness Articles Via RSS!

Recent Related Articles From Health-and-Fitness

  • Treatment Of Heart Attack And Home Remedies For Heart Care
    By: Dr. Lee Mikal | Mar 25th 2010
    The pediatric cardiac center at Miller Children’s Hospital provides total prenatal, infant, pediatric and young adult heart care for patients with congenital or acquired heart disease or who have a family history of heart problems.

    These heart evils include children who are born with hole in the heart, irreg ...
    Read

  • Naturally Lower Total Cholesterol -- Can It Be Done?
    By: Terry Johnston | Feb 16th 2010
    Naturally lower total cholesterol without having to use expensive drugs? How good would that be? Here's the secret-- you can! Read

  • The Relationship Between Heart Disease And Kidney Disease
    By: David Cowley | Nov 21st 2007
    How can you prevent heart and kidney disease Read

  • Heart Disease Causes, Symptoms, Diet Plan, Treatments And Home Remedies
    By: Dr Charles Buchar | Aug 2nd 2010
    Heart is a vital organ of our body. It is an organ which regulates our blood circulation and maintains the level of purity of our blood. It carries the deoxygenated blood from the various parts of the body and purifies it and gives it back for circulation to each and every part of the body.

    One of the can cause ...
    Read

  • Identify The Risk Factors Linked To Heart Attack Before It Attacks You!
    By: Neelima Reddy | Dec 24th 2007
    Heart attack is the leading cause of death of men and women in United States. There are many risk factors associated with heart attack. Know and identify the risk factors associated with heart attacks to prevent before you become a victim. Read

  • Cholesterol Treatment And Effective Natural Home Remedies For Cholesterol
    By: dr. sarkozy mikal | Dec 8th 2010
    Cholesterol is a waxy, fatlike matter that the body needs to function usually.

    Cholesterol is naturally present in cell walls or membranes all over the place in the body, counting the brain, nerves, muscles, skin, liver, intestines, and heart.
    Read

  • The Heart Of Heart Disease
    By: Stephen Sinatra | Feb 18th 2009
    A multi-billion-dollar industry has been built around the concept that large, cholesterol-filled blockages in the arteries cause heart attacks. That concept is just plain wrong. The reality is that as many as 80 percent of all heart attacks occur when smaller plaques, destabilized by inflammation, rupture and attract a bloo ... Read

  • Simple Steps To Healthy Heart Care

    Healthy heart care is an issue which could affect any of us especially as we grow older. The heart is one of the the most talked about parts of your body. The heart used metaphorically describes love as a great hurt such as a broken heart. "My heart overflows with my love for you," says a young man to his sweetheart. The em ... Read

  • Heart Diseases - How Can We Prevent Them?
    By: Peter Sams | Feb 2nd 2008
    The heart has long been associated with the very nature of humanity. As long ago as the fourth century BC, Aristotle considered it to be the seat of the soul, the centre of nutrition and the vital source of heat. The very word â€heart’ is still deeply embedded in our language in phrases such as â€heart-felt sympathy’, ... Read

  • How To Raise Blood Pressure And Cholesterol
    By: Stephen Sinatra | Mar 11th 2009
    Low blood pressure is often a sign of hypoadrenia or weak adrenal gland function. It's generally considered to be anything below 100/60, but you may begin to feel "off" even before it gets this low. Fatigue, feeling like you're going to blackout when you stand too quickly from a lying or sitting position, difficulty seeing ... Read


Copyright © 2005-2011 eArticlesOnline, LLC - All Rights Reserved
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy