Edited by Jonathan D. Kantrowitz
Published by Tsadek Press
Copyright
Jonathan Kantrowitz 2014
This book is a compendium of reports on all the latest research on the ways to avoid cardiovascular disease. There are so many good things you could be doing - most of them are easy! Eating, drinking, taking supplements, and exercising can have such a huge influence on your future health. This book may open your eyes to new ways to protect yourself and you family.. Don't wait another minute to order and read it!
This book is a compendium of reports on all the latest research on the ways to avoid cardiovascular disease. There are so many good things you could be doing - most of them are easy! Eating, drinking, taking supplements, and exercising can have such a huge influence on your future health. This book may open your eyes to new ways to protect yourself and you family.. Don't wait another minute to order and read it!
8.5 x 11, 228 pages
$14.95
2 Tsadek Press books $19.95
3 Tsadek Press books $24.95
2 Tsadek Press books $19.95
3 Tsadek Press books $24.95
Call 1-800-232--2224 to order a pdf of this title
Table of Contents
Healthy Diet
and Lifestyle
Aspirin
Chocolate
Coffee
Exercise
Fiber
Fish and Fish
Oil
Fruits and Vegetables
Mediterranean Diet
Vegetarian Diet
Moderate Alcohol Consumption
Olive Oil
Nuts
Pulses
and Whole Grains
Protein
Tea
Vitamin D
Coenzyme Q10
The 'Obesity Paradox'
Appendix: Dangerous Foods
Appendix: Stress
Caffeine may prevent heart
disease death in elderly
Green
tea, coffee may help lower stroke risk
Sample Articles
Caffeine may prevent heart
disease death in elderly
Habitual intake
of caffeinated beverages provides protection against heart disease mortality in
the elderly, say researchers at SUNY Downstate Medical Center and Brooklyn
College.
Using data from
the first federal National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
Epidemiologic Follow-up Study, the researchers found that survey participants
65 or more years old with higher caffeinated beverage intake exhibited lower
relative risk of coronary vascular disease and heart mortality than did
participants with lower caffeinated beverage intake.
John Kassotis,
MD, associate professor of medicine at SUNY Downstate, said, "The
protection against death from heart disease in the elderly afforded by caffeine
is likely due to caffeine's enhancement of blood pressure."_
The protective
effect also was found to be dose-responsive: the higher the caffeine intake the
stronger the protection. The protective effect was found only in participants
who were not severely hypertensive. No significant protective effect was in
patients below the age of 65.
Green
tea, coffee may help lower stroke risk
Green tea and
coffee may help lower your risk of having a stroke, especially when both are a
regular part of your diet, according to research published in Stroke: Journal of the American Heart
Association.
"This is
the first large-scale study to examine the combined effects of both green tea
and coffee on stroke risks," said Yoshihiro Kokubo, M.D., Ph.D., F.A.H.A.,
F.A.C.C., F.E.S.C., lead author of the study at Japan's National Cerebral and
Cardiovascular Center. "You may make a small but positive lifestyle change
to help lower the risk of stroke by adding daily green tea to your diet."
Researchers
asked 83,269 Japanese adults about their green tea and coffee drinking habits,
following them for an average 13 years. They found that the more green tea or
coffee people drink, the lower their stroke risks.
- People who
drank at least one cup of coffee daily had about a 20 percent lower risk of
stroke compared to those who rarely drank it.
- People who
drank two to three cups of green tea daily had a 14 percent lower risk of stroke
and those who had at least four cups had a 20 percent lower risk, compared to
those who rarely drank it.
- People who
drank at least one cup of coffee or two cups of green tea daily had a 32
percent lower risk of intracerebral hemorrhage, compared to those who rarely
drank either beverage. (Intracerebral hemorrhage happens when a blood vessel
bursts and bleeds inside the brain. About 13 percent of strokes are
hemorrhagic.)
- Participants
in the study were 45 to 74 years old, almost evenly divided in gender, and were
free from cancer and cardiovascular disease.
During the
13-years of follow-up, researchers reviewed participants' hospital medical
records and death certificates, collecting data about heart disease, strokes
and causes of death. They adjusted their findings to account for age, sex and
lifestyle factors like smoking, alcohol, weight, diet and exercise.
Previous limited
research has shown green tea's link to lower death risks from heart disease,
but has only touched on its association with lower stroke risks. Other studies
have shown inconsistent connections between coffee and stroke risks.
Initial study
results showed that drinking more than two cups of coffee daily was linked to
increasing coronary heart disease rates in age- and sex-adjusted analysis. But
researchers didn't find the association after factoring in the effects of
cigarette smoking — underscoring smoking's negative health impact on heart and
stroke health.
A typical cup of
coffee or tea in Japan was approximately six ounces. "However, our
self-reported data may be reasonably accurate, because nationwide annual health
screenings produced similar results, and our validation study showed relatively
high validity." Kokubo said. "The regular action of drinking tea,
coffee, largely benefits cardiovascular health because it partly keeps blood
clots from forming."
Some chemicals in coffee include chlorogenic acid, thus
cutting stroke risks by lowering the chances of developing type 2 diabetes.
Further research could clarify how the interaction between coffee and green tea
might help further lower stroke risks, Kokubo said.
Chocolate reduces the risk of cardiovascular disease and stroke
A number of recent
studies have shown that eating chocolate has a positive influence on human
health due to its antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. This includes
reducing blood pressure and improving insulin sensitivity (a stage in the development
of diabetes).
However, the
evidence about how eating chocolate affects your heart still remains unclear.
So, Dr Oscar Franco and colleagues from the University of Cambridge carried out
a large scale review of the existing evidence to evaluate the effects of eating
chocolate on cardiovascular events like heart attack and stroke.
They analysed the
results of seven studies, involving over 100,000 participants with and without
existing heart disease. For each study, they compared the group with the
highest chocolate consumption against the group with the lowest consumption.
Differences in study design and quality were also taken into account to
minimise bias.
Five studies
reported a beneficial link between higher levels of chocolate consumption and
the risk of cardiovascular events and they found that the "highest levels
of chocolate consumption were associated with a 37% reduction in cardiovascular
disease and a 29% reduction in stroke compared with lowest levels." No
significant reduction was found in relation to heart failure.
The studies did
not differentiate between dark or milk chocolate and included consumption of
chocolate bars, drinks, biscuits and desserts.
The authors say
the findings need to be interpreted with caution, in particular because
commercially available chocolate is very calorific (around 500 calories for
every 100 grams) and eating too much of it could in itself lead to weight gain,
risk of diabetes and heart disease.