The Defy Aging Newsletter
a biweekly e-mail newsletter for helping you
think, feel, look, and be more youthful and live with purpose
December 6, 2007         Number 177

This issue:
Preventing Heart Disease

Action to take

Develop and act upon a more sophisticated view of heart disease.

 

Why

 

American medicine has given the public the impression that the key to

preventing heart attacks is controlling cholesterol. How did this happen?

Follow the money. There is more money to be made by selling prescription drugs

to lower cholesterol than in healthier eating or generic supplements.

 

I think the best information on cardiovascular health comes from the

Life Extension Foundation. I receive no consideration for recommending

them. I do so because I find their research high quality and cutting edge.

What they recommend usually becomes mainstream medicine a decade later.

 

Cardiologists have focused on increasing HDLs and decreasing LDLs

and triglyceride fats. They often prescribe statin medications to reduce LDLs

and to some extent raise HDLs though these medications tax the liver and often have

side effects like muscle weakness. Research finds they lower the risk of death

from a heart attack but increase the risk of death from other causes.

 

The Life Extension Foundation presents a much more complex picture with

14 factors that play a major role in heart disease:

 

1. low levels of EPA/DHA (fish oil)

2. elevated C-reactive protein

3. excess LDL

4. excess insulin

5. low HDL

6. high glucose

7. insufficient nitrous oxide

8. excess triglycerides

9. low free testosterone

10. excess fibrinogen (making the blood too likely to clot)

11. excess homocystine (a metabolism byproduct)

12. hypertension

13. low vitamin K

14. excess cholesterol

 

Extreme problems with any of these can be fatal. Typically several of the factors have a

cumulative effect in compromising cardiovascular health. LEF is has increasingly been

emphasizing that with age the endothelial linings of blood vessels become damaged and less elastic.

Rigid blood vessels and inflammation become the recipe for a stroke or heart attack.

 

Much of the loss of elasticity in blood vessels is due to lower levels of nitrous oxide.

This may ring a bell as Viagra acts by increasing nitrous oxide, causing blood

to engorge the penis. While there are numerous supplements that can help with

preventing or lessening atherosclerosis ("hardening" of the arteries), three are

emerging as perhaps the most helpful for blood vessel health. All three help raise

nitrous oxide levels:

1. pomegranate (from the fruit--also inhibits LDL oxidations and cancers)

2. cocoa (dark chocolate--also helps lower blood pressure)

3. superoxide dismutase (With age our bodies produce far less of the

antioxidant enzyme SOD. SOD's also combats free radical damage and inflammation.)

 

To give an example of research finding, here is a quote form the Life Extension magazine:

A second human study showed that after only three weeks of consuming dark chocolate,

test subjects showed a 11.4% increase in HDL levels. In the group receiving dark

chocolate enriched with cocoa polyphenols, a 13.7% increase in artery protecting

HDL was observed. The white chocolate group did not show these beneficial

increases in HDL, but all three groups did show a decrease of LDL oxidation by 11.9%.

 

Pomegranate is available as a juice or supplement. Cocoa is available in dark chocolate

(it only takes modest quantities for the benefit). SOD would have to be consumed as a

supplement. All three, pomegranate, cocoa, and SOD are available as supplements.

 

Quotes


An apple a day keeps the doctor away--but doesn't make any money for the doctor,

the pharmaceutical companies, or CVS.

~Michael Brickey


Humor

Don't you think it's unnerving that doctors call what they do "Practice?"
~George Carlin

The doctor took his patient into his office and said, "I have some good news and some bad news."
The patient said, "Give me the good news."
The doctor said, "They're going to name a disease after you."

________
 

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THE DEFY AGING NEWSLETTER
Anti-Aging Psychology
Holistic Health and Wellness

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"Dr. Michael Brickey, The Anti-Aging Psychologist, teaches people to think, feel, look and be more youthful. He is an inspiring keynote speaker and Oprah-featured author. His works include:  Defy Aging, 52 baby steps to Grow Young, and Reverse Aging (anti-aging hypnosis CDs). Visit www.NotAging.com for a free report on anti-aging secrets and a free newsletter with practical anti-aging tips."