Cardiovascular disease claims more women's lives than the next five
causes of death combined - about 500,000 women's lives a year.
You do not have to be among that number. Researchers note that there are
some nutrients and easily accessed foods and not so difficult habits
which can significantly improve the health of both women and men's
heart.
Orange and grapefruit juice
A one-ounce glass of juice that's half orange and half white grapefruit.
The sour stuff is loaded with the flavonoid naringin, which Korean
researchers found can lower LDL levels by as much as 17 per cent. As for
the orange juice, it can boost HDL (by as much as 21 per cent, if you
drink three glasses daily).
Walnuts
Mix crushed walnuts into yogurt or drop them on cereal; a new study in
angiology says that eating walnuts can raise HDL by nine per cent.
Finally, swap your morning coffee for tea. USDA researchers found that
drinking tea can cut LDL by 11 per cent.
Talk about your problems
New Canadian study shows that when work-stressed subjects received
support from their partners, their systolic pressure dropped an average
of 2.5 mmHg.
Aspirin
Take two aspirin a day if you are hypertensive. Spanish researchers
recently found that hypertensive people who took 162 mg aspirin before
bed decreased their systolic pressure by 6.8 mmHg and their diastolic by
4.6 mmHg. (Check with your doctor first).
Prayer
Before you sleep: Pray. New research shows that men who pray frequently
have 3.5 per cent lower diastolic BP than once-in-a-while worshippers.
Vary exercise
Train for a half hour at 60 to 80 per cent of your maximum heart rate
three times a week - but on one day, pick a random point and run (or
bike) to it as fast as you can.
Linoleic Acid
Supplement with conjugated linoleic acid (CLA). Canadian researchers
noted that people who popped four grams of CLA daily had a 27 per cent
jump in insulin sensitivity after just eight weeks.
Chocolate
For an extra boost, replace 600 calories in your diet with an extra dark
chocolate bar; according to a new Italian study, this can quadruple
insulin sensitivity in two weeks.
Vitamin C and magnesium
Swallow the tag-team treatment of vitamin C and magnesium. University of
California at Berkeley researchers recently showed that taking a daily
500 mg vitamin C supplement can decrease CRP (C-Reactive protein) levels
by 24 per cent. And according to a new study in the Journal of the
American College of Nutrition, people low on magnesium are up to two
times more likely to have elevated CRP levels than those meeting their
quota.
Source: MSN.com