Archive for the ‘Healthy Living’ Category

Heart Disease And The Vitamin C Connection

Did you know vitamin C has many benefits besides helping fight the common cold. Vitamin C also even promotes heart health. Here are a few of the benefits directly related to heart disease:

  • Slows atherosclerosis hardening of the arteries.
  • Reduces repeat angioplasties.
  • Improves endothelial function.
  • Decreases atrial fibrillation post-bypass surgery.
  • Improves heart attack recovery.
  • Promotes blood pressure control.
  • Regulates c-reactive protein levels.

Risk of vitamin C deficiency increases with age. Some additional factors affecting vitamin C deficiency include birth control pills, antibiotics, painkillers, cigarettes, stress, high blood pressure, and fever.

Fruits and vegetables are the best source of vitamin C, such as peppers, kale, parsley, greens, broccoli, watercress, cauliflower, strawberries, oranges, grapefruit, mangos, okra, green peas, radishes, squash, and berries.

Current vitamin C recommendations are between 1000 to 5000 milligrams per day. Since vitamin C is a water-soluble vitamin and is quickly eliminated from the body it is best to divide your supplement into two or three doses throughout the day. However, if you are likely to forget it’s better to take the supplement all at once. If you supplement more than 5000 mg per day you increase your risk of experiencing diarrhea. Discuss all supplements with your physician.

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How To Make the Right Decision About Medications

Medicine can do wonderful things. Our lives are better in the last 50 or so years because of medical advances. We have birth control pills, vaccines for childhood illnesses and medications for blood pressure and cholesterol. These are only a few of the “miracle drugs” that now are life-changing and sometimes even save our lives. However, because there are now so many different types of drugs, we have a new challenge. It is to make sure the medications we are taking to not interact with each other.

Your pharmacist can give a quick and educated answer for any problem that you may have with medications. If for some reason you do not want to talk with your pharmacist, you can call your physician’s office or search on line for a drug interaction site. This site will also advise you what medications you cannot take with grapefruit juice.

If you have an inflammatory condition such as arthritis, the doctor may want to prescribe a narcotic drug, which may be habit-forming. The reason for this is that most of the anti-inflammatory drugs that will help these conditions also produce serious side effects.

However, it is up to you, as a consumer to figure out your quality of life without the anti-inflammatory medications, as opposed to the possible side effects. If you do decide to take NSAIDS, your physician will administer tests about every three months for liver and stomach problems.

You can help your physician decide what is best for you by the following:

  • Every time you visit your doctor, make sure he or she knows what drugs that you are allergic to.
  • When a physician prescribes a medication, do your own research about that drug.
  • Always ask about drug interaction.
  • If you have side-affects from a drug, stop taking it immediately and call your doctor.
  • Keep a list of your medications.

Drugs are sometimes necessary, but if you could find a doctor or pain clinic that is open to all types of treatment, such as acupuncture, counseling and physical therapy, you would have more options to choose from.

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How Consumption Of Water Reduces The Risk Of Heart Disease

water consumption, heart disease,glasses of water a day,drinking water, tap waterOne of the most remarkable medical research findings is how consumption of water reduces the risk of heart disease. That’s water, plain water.

Professor Jacqueline Chan of studied the water consumption habits and health histories of 20,000 people. She found that drinking three or four glasses of water a day reduced the risk of coronary heart disease, 40 percent for men and 43 percent for women. What about drinking even more water? Consumption of five or more glasses of water a day cut heart disease risk 62 percent for men, but oddly only 39 for women.

Here are even more really unexpected results. That risk reduction from drinking water was greater than that found for other more acclaimed heart-protecting steps, namely quitting smoking, reducing cholesterol, exercising, and maintaining a healthy weight. It was even better than taking a daily low-dose aspirin or having a glass of wine.

What is in drinking water matters. Other research found that drinking hard water results in less cardiovascular disease than drinking soft water. Hard water has more calcium carbonate and magnesium in it. Similarly, it has also been found that people who drank water higher in Total Dissolved Solids (TDS) had lower death rates from heart disease, cancer and chronic diseases than people who drank water with low amounts of TDS. TDS not only includes calcium and magnesium (the hardness factors), but also zinc, copper chromium, selenium and other elements.

Beware, drinking other fluids, notably coffee, soda, milk and other caffeinated drinks did not reduce heart risk. Caffeine and alcohol are diuretics, meaning they pull more water out of your body than they put in.

The average person loses about 2 percent of their body weight every day by producing urine and perspiration. Replacing this water is crucial in keeping your blood volume normal. Otherwise your blood gets heavy and harder for your heart to pump. Water protects against blood clot formation by decreasing blood viscosity.

Naturally, exercising in hot and humid weather means even high water loss. The American Heart Association recommends drinking 8 ounces of water before, during and again after exercising. Drinking too much water without replacing electrolytes can be dangerous. Many sports drinks provide electrolytes, but try and use the low calorie versions.

Also, recognize that some foods provide another way to get water in your diet. Soups, stews, vegetables like celery and peppers, and juicy fruits like watermelon, cantaloupe, oranges and grapefruit.

In addition to reducing heart risk, maintaining adequate water intake helps prevent getting kidney stones, constipation and fatigue. It also helps you lose weight.

Never take water for granted. And don’t think that expensive bottled water is necessary or better for you than your tap water.

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How To Improve Your Healthy Eating Habit In 21 Days

Great health is not about getting on the latest dietary fad train, whether it comes from Hollywood, Brazil, USA or South Africa. Lasting health is more about forming a healthy eating habit that will last a lifetime. Yes, eating healthy is a habit. You must make healthy eating a long-term, lifelong habit for you to feel and see lasting results. What is a habit? The lexicon defines a “habit” as “an acquired behavior pattern regularly followed until it has become almost involuntary”. A habit is a “customary practice or use.” The word “custom” is a synonym for “habit”.

From this definition, we can derive four truths about a habit.

1.    A habit takes effort. It does not just happen. It is “acquired”. You have to earn a habit.

2.    A habit takes action. It is “behavior”, not just thought or words. You form a habit by doing.

3.     A habit requires consistency on your part. It is a “pattern regularly followed”. You don’t have a habit if you do something for only a week, month, or if you keep skimping and skipping. You have to stick to it all the time.

4.    A habit will never become completely effortless. Notice that the habit becomes “almost involuntary”, but not totally so. You will always have to put in some effort, even after you have formed the habit. Though it becomes almost second nature, it never gets to the point of reflex action like bobbing your eye or breathing in and out.

The Law of Habit Formation: Twenty Times = Habit

Do you know how long it takes for a repeated action to become a habit? According to the experts, if you do something for 21 consecutive times it becomes a habit.

Are you ready to make healthy eating your habit? On your calendar, start with the next morning’s date and mark each of the next 21 days with the letters “EH” for Eat Healthy. Start eating healthy on your start date, and you continue eating healthy for every meal for the next 21 days.

Assuming you eat breakfast, lunch and supper/dinner each day for 21 days, it will take 63 (21 x 3) incidents of healthy meals for you to qualify as a healthy eater by habit. And this one habit will do more for your quality of life than some of the many useless or harmful habits we have formed like watching two hours of television each day.

Basic Menu for 21 Days (Sample to Get You Started)

Breakfast

  • Supplements: natural multivitamins (preferably liquid), flax seed oil, fish oil gel tablet, pro-biotic
  • Food: whole grain cereal, whole grain bread, whole grain waffle, or whole grain pancake
  • Drink: filtered water; 100% fruit juice (limeade or lime juice, Concord grape juice, or orange juice); green tea, black tea or both.

Lunch

  • Food: whole grain organic rice or pasta with stew, whole grain sandwich, Subway with whole grain or wheat bread, mixed vegetables, nuts, fruits
  • Drink: filtered water; 100% fruit juice; green tea, black tea or both

Supper or Dinner

  • Food: whole grain bread with natural honey; mixed vegetables; whole grain rice or pasta with stew, fruits
  • Drink: filtered water; 100% fruit juice

 

If you want to snack in between breakfast, lunch or supper, snack on water, fruits, and nuts, instead of eating junk sweets for snacks.

Begin your healthy eating habit today, and in just 21 days, you will reach your goal. You can do it. How do I know? I’ve been living the healthy eating habit for more than 11 years now

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