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New Thinking on How to Protect the Heart
January 12, 2009
Heart Attack
Many measures are probably familiar: not smoking, controlling
cholesterol and blood pressure, exercising regularly and staying at a
healthy weight. But some newer suggestions may surprise you.
It is not that the old advice, like eating a low-fat diet or exercising
vigorously, was bad advice; it was based on the best available evidence
of the time and can still be very helpful. But as researchers unravel
the biochemical reasons for most heart attacks, the advice for avoiding
them is changing.
And, you’ll be happy to know, the new suggestions for both diet and
exercise are less rigid. The food is tasty, easy to prepare and
relatively inexpensive, and you don’t have to sweat for an hour a day to
reap the benefits of exercise.
The well-established risk factors for heart disease remain intact: high
cholesterol, high blood pressure, smoking, diabetes, abdominal obesity
and sedentary living. But behind them a relatively new factor has
emerged that may be even more important as a cause of heart attacks
than, say, high blood levels of artery-damaging cholesterol.
That factor is C-reactive protein, or CRP, a blood-borne marker of
inflammation that, along with coagulation factors, is now increasingly
recognized as the driving force behind clots that block blood flow to
the heart. Yet patients are rarely tested for CRP, even if they already
have heart problems.
Even in people with normal cholesterol, if CRP is elevated, the risk of
heart attack is too, said Dr. Michael Ozner, medical director of the
Cardiovascular Prevention Institute of South Florida. He thinks that
when people have their cholesterol checked, they should also be tested
for high-sensitivity CRP.
Diet Revisited
The new dietary advice is actually based on a rather old finding that
predates the mantra to eat a low-fat diet. In the Seven Countries Study
started in 1958 and first published in 1970, Dr. Ancel Keys of the
University of Minnesota and co-authors found that heart disease was rare
in the Mediterranean and Asian regions where vegetables, grains, fruits,
beans and fish were the dietary mainstays. But in countries like Finland
and the United States where plates were typically filled with red meat,
cheese and other foods rich in saturated fats, heart disease and cardiac
deaths were epidemic.
The finding resulted in the well-known advice to reduce dietary fat and
especially saturated fats (those that are firm at room temperature), and
to replace these harmful fats with unsaturated ones like vegetable oils.
What was missed at the time and has now become increasingly apparent is
that the heart-healthy Mediterranean diet is not really low in fat, but
its main sources of fat — olive oil and oily fish as well as nuts, seeds
and certain vegetables — help to prevent heart disease by improving
cholesterol ratios and reducing inflammation.
Virtues Confirmed
It was not until 1999 that the value of a traditional Mediterranean diet
was confirmed, when the Lyon Diet Heart Study compared the effects of a
Mediterranean-style diet with one that the American Heart Association
recommended for patients who had survived a first heart attack.
The study found that within four years, the Mediterranean approach
reduced the rates of heart disease recurrence and cardiac death by 50 to
70 percent when compared with the heart association diet.
Several subsequent studies have confirmed the virtues of the
Mediterranean approach. For example, a study among more than 3,000 men
and women in Greece, published in 2004 by Dr. Christina Chrysohoou of
the University of Athens, found that adhering to a Mediterranean diet
improved six markers of inflammation and coagulation, including CRP,
white blood cell count and fibrinogen.
The same year Kim T. B. Knoops, a nutritionist at Wageningen University
in the Netherlands, and co-authors published a study showing that among
men and women ages 70 to 90, those who followed a Mediterranean diet and
other healthful practices, like not smoking, had a 50 percent lower rate
of deaths from heart disease and all causes.
“The Mediterranean diet is one people can stick to,” said Dr. Ozner,
author of “The Miami Mediterranean Diet” and “The Great American Heart
Hoax” (BenBella, 2008). “The food is delicious, and the ingredients can
be found in any grocery store.
“You should make most of the food yourself,” Dr. Ozner added. “When the
diet is stripped of lots of processed foods, you ratchet down
inflammation. Among my patients, the compliance rate — those who adopt
the diet and stick with it — is greater than 90 percent.”
Among foods that help to reduce the inflammatory marker CRP are
cold-water fish like salmon, tuna and mackerel; flax seed; walnuts; and
canola oil and margarine based on canola oil. Fish oil capsules are also
effective. Dr. Ozner recommends cooking with canola oil and using more
expensive and aromatic olive oil for salads.
Other aspects of the Mediterranean diet — vegetables, fruits and red
wine (or purple grape juice) — are helpful as well. Their antioxidant
properties help prevent the formation of artery-damaging LDL
cholesterol.
Other Steps
Several recent studies have linked periodontal disease to an increased
risk of heart disease, most likely because gum disease causes low-grade
chronic inflammation. So good dental hygiene, with regular periodontal
cleanings, can help protect your heart as well as your teeth.
Reducing chronic stress is another important factor. The Interheart
study, which examined the effects of stress in more than 27,000 people,
found that stress more than doubled the risk of heart attacks.
Dr. Joel Okner, a cardiologist in Chicago, and Jeremy Clorfene, a
cardiac psychologist, the authors of “The No Bull Book on Heart Disease”
(Sterling, 2009), note that getting enough sleep improves the ability to
manage stress.
Practicing the relaxation response once or twice a day by breathing
deeply and rhythmically in a quiet place with eyes closed and muscles
relaxed can help cool the hottest blood. Other techniques Dr. Ozner
recommends include meditation, prayer, yoga, self-hypnosis, laughter,
taking a midday nap, getting a dog or cat, taking up a hobby and
exercising regularly.
He noted that in a 1996 study, just 15 minutes of exercise five days a
week decreased the risk of cardiac death by 46 percent.
Even very brief bouts of exercise can be helpful. A British study
published in the current American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found
that accumulating short bouts — just three minutes each — of brisk
walking for a total of 30 minutes a day improved several measures of
cardiac risk as effectively as one continuous 30-minute session.
How to Protect the Heart
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