How to prevent, treat and reverse heart disease with diet and natural remedies
(NaturalNews) Both cardiologists Dr. Dwight Lundell and Dr. Stephen
Sinatra have come out of the medical mafia matrix to announce that fat
and cholesterol are not the main culprits responsible for hardening of
the arteries and heart disease, even as many others still insist on this
disinformation.
Dr. Lundell wrote the book
The Cure for Heart Disease and Dr. Sinatra wrote
The Great Cholesterol Myth. They both claim that fat, even saturated fats
from healthy sources,
are necessary. As a matter of fact, low fat diets are dangerous. Even
with the low fat diet craze, heart disease has increased!
Epidermal
cholesterol initiates the conversation of UVB ray sunlight into vitamin
D3. Fats are also a large part of the myelin sheath that insulates
nerves to facilitate neuron impulse activity. Fat is also a large part
of our cell wall formation and 60 to 80 percent of our brains'
composition.
This may explain why people on statin drugs continue
having heart attacks with increased neurological issues, including
Alzheimer's disease. Their brains and nervous systems deteriorate
because of statin drugs' efficacy at reducing cholesterol!
Dr. Robert Lustig's groundbreaking lecture on sugar and HFCS went wildly viral on YouTube. He explains that there is
one troublesome type of LDL that manages to slip under the
endothelium, or outer sheath of the inner arterial walls, to cause inflammation, the true source of arteriosclerosis.
That
particular type of LDL molecule comes from excess sugars and refined
starches, especially HFCS, not unprocessed unsaturated or saturated
fats. (Video linked below)
There are other arterial factors as well.
Excess blood calcium that isn't taken into bone tissue also literally calcifies inner
arterial walls. Increased magnesium, silica, and vitamin K2 remedy that.
Tips to prevent and remedy heart disease issuesFirst cut back on refined sugar (sucrose) and refined starches such as white flour products and refined grains.
Avoid HFCS (high fructose corn syrup), sometimes called corn syrup, completely.
The fructose of whole fruits is okay unless excessively consumed,
especially as juice.
But HFCS is a really unhealthy processed
compound that is poorly metabolized by the liver and stored as fat
instead of being used for glucose energy. Besides, the type of corn used
is undoubtedly GMO and the process for making HFCS contaminates it with
traces of mercury.
Increase your omega-3 fatty acid intake. Both cardiologists mentioned above refer to the imbalance of omega-6
fatty acids to omega-3 as an inflammatory factor in the standard
American
diet (SAD).
Omega-3
is high in fish and krill oils, fatty fish, freshly ground flax seeds,
hemp seeds, and chia seeds as well as avocados and free range eggs. The
oils from those plants are also beneficial if they are organic and cold
pressed.
Avoid oils that are processed by heat or hydrogenated. These cause inflammation, and they're ubiquitous in processed and fast foods. But there is one cold pressed oil to avoid,
Canola (rapeseed) oil. It's not the health food it's promoted to be.
Increase your
magnesium intake. It's the most important ignored mineral in existence involving 300 metabolic processes. It directly affects
heart health, especially with heart beat regulation. Yet most Americans are magnesium deficient.
Greens
are excellent sources of magnesium, which can also be supplemented
orally with magnesium citrate formulas or topically with magnesium
chloride, and even by soaking in Epsom salts.
Studies have determined that
pomegranate juice helps unclog arteries by reducing artery thickness. L-Arginine is a
supplement that helps increase blood vessel nitric oxide to repair
arterial inner lining damage.
Master herbalist Dr. John Christopher was nicknamed doctor
cayenne because he praised its value as a heart health tonic, which if strong enough could halt a heart attack in progress.
Jamaica tea (hu-my-ku) reduces blood pressure, and
Hawthorn berry tea or extracts are traditional Chinese heart tonics that have stood up to western clinical research.
Source:-
http://www.naturalnews.com/040203_heart_disease_prevention_diet.html