ADVANCEDBROWSE SUBJECTS
alive Academy
Alive Forum
Event Calendar
Health Retailer Search
Alive Awards
Alive Web Exclusives
Alive Australia


APEX Awards 2009

Find a store
Subscribe to our Free Newsletter!

Enlarge Font Printer Version Email It to a Friend
Preventing Heart Disease
by author Michael T. Murray, ND

Has blood cholesterol been overemphasized as a risk factor for heart disease?

Elevated blood cholesterol levels, particularly the bad form of cholesterol–low-density lipoprotein (LDL)–is definitely a risk factor, but it is just one piece of the puzzle. After all, more than half of the people who die as a result of a heart attack or stroke have normal to low cholesterol levels.

Little-Known Risk Factors

The major risk factors for heart disease include smoking, elevated cholesterol levels, diabetes, high blood pressure, and physical inactivity. However, there are other factors that, in some cases, are more significant than the “major” risk factors in causing heart disease (see sidebar).

Much of the current research has focused on the central role that inflammatory processes play. In particular, C-reactive protein (CRP), a substance associate with inflammation and insulin resistance, has been identified as an independent risk factor for coronary artery disease. Fortunately, CRP levels can be lowered effectively with diet, lifestyle, and nutritional supplements.

Hearts Love the Mediterranean Diet

One of the most powerful dietary interventions in the prevention and treatment of heart disease is the traditional “Mediterranean diet,” shown to lower CRP levels. This diet reflects food patterns typical of some Mediterranean regions, such as Greece and southern Italy, in the early 1960s. It has the following characteristics:

  • Olive oil is the principal source of fat.
  • It emphasizes plant foods (fruit, vegetables, breads, pasta, potatoes, beans, nuts, and seeds).
  • Foods are minimally processed, and there is a focus on seasonally fresh and locally grown foods.
  • Fresh fruit is the typical daily dessert, with sweets containing concentrated sugars or honey consumed a few times per week at the most.
  • Dairy products (principally cheese and yogourt) are consumed daily in low to moderate amounts.
  • Fish is consumed on a regular basis.
  • Poultry and eggs are consumed in moderate amounts (1 to 4 times weekly) or not at all.
  • Red meat is consumed in small amounts.
  • Wine is consumed in low to moderate amounts, normally with meals.

    While several components of the Mediterranean diet have been evaluated independently, it is important to stress that the total benefits reflect the interplay among the many beneficial compounds rather than any single element. Nonetheless, the importance of omega-3 fatty acids deserves special mention.

The Omega-3 Index

The higher the omega-3 fatty acid intake, the lower the likelihood of coronary heart disease. In particular, the level of the omega-3 fatty acids eicosapentaenoic (EPA) and docosahexaenoic (DHA) within red blood cells has been shown to be a highly significant predictor of heart disease. This laboratory value has been termed the Omega-3 Index. An Omega-3 Index of greater than or equal to 8 percent is associated with the greatest protection, whereas an index of less than or equal to 4 percent is associated with the least. Researchers have determined that taking 1,000 mg of EPA and DHA daily from pharmaceutical-grade fish oil is required to achieve or surpass the 8 percent-plus Omega-3 Index target.

Selected Risk Factors for Heart Disease

  • insulin resistance
  • low antioxidant levels
  • elevations of C-reactive protein (CRP)
  • low levels of omega-3 fatty acids
  • increased platelet aggregation and fibrinogen formation
  • low thyroid function
  • low levels of magnesium and potassium
  • elevated levels of homocysteine
  • “type A” personality

Lower Your Risk for Heart Disease

There is little doubt that in most cases heart disease is directly related to diet and lifestyle. Treatment and prevention include reducing all known risk factors, not just cholesterol. Here’s a general approach for lowering CRP levels.

Dietary Recommendations

Follow the Mediterranean diet.

Lifestyle Recommendations

Achieve and main a healthy body weight.
Do regular aerobic exercise.
Don’t smoke.

Supplements

High potency multiple vitamin and mineral formula
Vitamin C: 500 to1,000 mg three times/day
Vitamin E: 400 to 800 IU/day
Fish oil supplement: Minimum 1,000 mg/day of combined EPA and DHA

Michael T. Murray, ND, is widely regarded as one of the world’s leading authorities on natural medicine. He is a faculty member at Bastyr University in Seattle, Washington.

Source: alive #268, February 2005

Back to top

See Related Content
Nine Tips for Whole-Hearted Health
Our hearts, in a tireless and endless effort, work to circulate blood throughout our body. But in return we tend to often neglect and abuse our hearts, with heart disease being the number one cause of death in Canada..
Exercise Your Heart Safely
The major killer in North America today is heart disease, even though it is preventable with proper nutrition and regular exercise.
Supplements And Herbs For A Healthy Heart
Heart disease statistics could make one's blood run cold--clogged arteries, heart attacks and strokes are responsible for almost 40 per cent of North American deaths.
Catch of the Day Keeps Heart Failure Away
When women think of their health, they worry about breast cancer and osteoporosis--not heart disease. Heart disease is an issue for their grandfathers, fathers and husbands.
Prevent Heart Deterioration With Supplements
Ask yourself, "What is the one health challenge that most Canadians will face?" The answer is always heart disease. Heart disease is the most likely condition to shorten lifespan and affect quality of lif.
Whole Foods for Heart Health
Be your own valentine! As you think of ways to please your sweetheart, think of your own heart too. How healthy is it? We have to take this question seriously, since heart problems just keep on increasing in our country. I have checked many sources to come up with these heart-friendly recipes.
Hard on the Heart
The idea that too much animal fat and a high cholesterol level are dangerous to our hearts and blood vessels is nothing but a myth, according to Swedi.
Your Venous System
The cardiovascular system consists of the heart, arteries and veins working in synchronicity. Taking good care of your heart is common sense. Plenty has been written on keeping arteries clear, but a system is only as strong as its weakest link. Most people don't give their venous system a second thought until it's too late..
Herbs for Your Heart
It's easy to forget about the heart, as it does its job automaticall.
Hearts Love Herbs
You can't think about heart herbs, especially during the month of February, without thinking of heartsease, the little three-coloured wild pansy (Viola tricolor).
Heart Problems?
Homeopathy has an excellent history of use in acute and chronic heart ailments. A man has his first heart attack. In the emergency department, the physician observes his overwhelming fear of impending death and gives him two pellets of homeopathic Aconitum under his tongue.
Angina
Bypass surgery is five to 10 times more likely to kill you than save you. Angina is more than just chest pain. The symptoms are similar to those of a heart attack, albeit less severe, and they usually end in one to 10 minutes.
Understanding the Cardiovascular System
To understand your cardiovascular system, with its hardworking heart and complex support network of arteries, veins and capillaries, think of it as a delivery system of highways and roads that allow oxygen-rich blood to reach every cell of your body.
The Heart of the Matter
Hospital waiting rooms are lonely places. Unfortunately for many people, the firstintroduction to cardiac disease involves waiting for physicians and nurses to deliver news about loved ones.
Heart Happy
Your heart must be challenged on a regular basis. It is a muscle and, like any other muscle in the body, the more it is used, the stronger it becomes. And, also like other muscles, a stronger heart will also be more efficient at doing its job.
Do You Suffer From Heart Disease?
Cardiovascular disease is the number-one preventable cause of death in Canada today. A healthy diet of whole natural foods, regular exercise and good quality sleep can go a long way to reduce the stresses on our heart, arguably the body's most important organ.
Seniors: Hooked on Drugs
About 75 -per -cent of seniors 65 and older living in private households take prescription or non-prescription drugs on a daily basis. For institutionalized seniors, this jumps to a whopping 96 -per -cent.
Heart Pains
Heart disease accounts for the death of more Canadians than any other disease with about 79,400 deaths annually. Yet, many Canadians do not understand, or perhaps refuse to believe, the potentially life-saving power of food.
Grape Expectations
It is sobering news for women that they now not only suffer equal rates of heart disease as men, but are more likely to die from their heart attacks.
Heart on Track
In this month of cupid's arrows, the emotional health of our heart is under the spotlight. Amid the deluge of chocolates and flowers, however, it's important to remember to nurture the physical health of this most vulnerable organ..
Shopping List for a Healthy Heart

Vitamin E (100 percent natural source mixed toco.
Reduce Your Risk of Heart Disease Without Prescriptions
Cholesterol tests have been the standard for predicting heart disease for many years. However, a new risk factor - high levels of homocysteine - have gained increasing interest and research in recent years.
A New Start?
Ready to make a new start this year? Don't forget about your heart! A routine of healthy diet, stress reduction, and exercise will go a long way toward helping to improve your odds of avoiding heart disease. Many natural products, too, can help improve your heart health.
Move Over Has-Bean
Recently, while my friends and I were sharing a laugh over a cuppa java, I looked across the table at Amanda's cup and realized there was no ebony liquid in it. Instead, she was delicately sipping green tea. One of Amanda's jokes?
Healthy Heart Metabolism
Everyone knows that one of the main keys to healthy heart metabolism is regular exercise. Aside from the fact that exercise strengthens muscle tissue-and your heart is a muscle-exercise also enhances one of the body's main repair biochemicals, insulin-like growth factor-1, or IGF-1.
Heart Health in a Heartbeat
Each day the human heart beats 100,000 times and pumps up to 5,000 gallons of blood. That's a lot of work, and it illustrates how essential the heart is in delivering oxygen and nutrients to all parts of the body. Having a healthy heart and circulatory system is essential to a long and healthy life.
What's your expiry date?
To know the date of your death well in advance would be a rare gift. Or would it?
The Copper Connection
Copper is at the core of normal body function. Without copper, we cannot form superoxide dismutase, the superpower of all antioxidants. Copper also helps our bodies create collagen, the protein that forms healthy joints and supple, young skin. And it has a role in helping our bodies store iron, a critical component of the formation of hemoglobin in red blood cells.
Coronary Heart Disease
This month we look at preventing and treating heart disease. Nathan examines ounces of prevention, measured in grams of fat per serving, while Janice discovers the importance of familial connection, measured in speed of returned phone calls.
Top 10 Tips For a Healthy Heart
Can diet and lifestyle changes really help you fight family history of heart disease and prevent heart attacks, high blood pressure, and stroke? Medical research says yes.
Eating Ă  la Italia for Joint Wellness
The Mediterranean diet may "suppress disease activity in patients who have modestly active rheumatoid arthritis.
Coenzyme Q10
One of the most important coenzymes discovered-CoQ10-has been compared to a spark plug in a car. Just as a car cannot function without that initial spark, the human body cannot function without CoQ10.
Heart to Health
Traditional merges with modern in this short list of herbs, nutritional supplements, and natural foods recommended by naturopathic and medical doctors, researchers, and, yes, even your dear old granny.
Superfood in a Nutshell
What nuts lack in size they more than make up for in nutrition.
Remember Rhodiola
A herb that was widely used by ancient Nordic seafarers is still being used by monks of the Himalayas. The therapeutic properties of this Arctic herb, rhodiola (Rhodiola rosea), have also been impressing modern researchers.
This Might Save Your Life
"I'm going to call an ambulance, I told my patient, a woman in her early 50s. She knew that something was wrong, but I knew she wasn't convinced that her symptoms were serious. Most women, and many men, aren't aware of the more subtle signs of a heart attack.

Back to top