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Tag: heart disease

Two Supplements That May Clean Out Your Arteries

Atherosclerosis, the buildup of cholesterol, fats, and calcium in arterial walls, is a major risk factor for heart attacks and strokes. Some people are more genetically susceptible, but lifestyle factors play a huge role in the development of this disease. High blood pressure, smoking, obesity, and high blood sugar levels all contribute to the development of atherosclerosis.

Most conventional treatments, such as quitting smoking, reducing sodium, or adding statins, aim to slow the progression of the disease. Some supplements, such as aged garlic and coenzyme Q10, may also slow progression. A plant based diet may also be protective.

But can atherosclerosis actually be reversed, either partially or completely? Can we clean out our arteries?

Short answer: we don’t know yet. But there are two supplements I take based on limited evidence that they may reverse atherosclerosis.

Three Counterintuitive Ways to Reduce Your Risk of Heart Disease (and Osteoporosis, While You’re at It)

Bad for the goose, good for you.

Heart disease runs in my family, like it does in many families.  Few people are immune to the insidious accumulation of arterial plaque.  Known risk factors include smoking, a sedentary lifestyle, age, and type-2 diabetes.  Dietary factors are acknowledged, but there is no consensus regarding which dietary factors are actually risky.  The stale conventional wisdom regarding cholesterol, meat, and saturated fat being bad for your heart is rapidly giving way to a more nuanced view that considers systemic inflammation, blood sugar regulation, and calcium metabolism.  Starchy foods (bread, pasta, rice, potatoes), fructose, and other high glycemic-index foods are now viewed with more suspicion than the once-maligned rib-eye steak and scrambled eggs.  Many doctors still consider arterial hardening to be irreversible, but a new breed of cardiologists has a different view; arterial plaque can be measured, controlled, and even reversed.

What can you do to reduce your own risk of heart disease (or even reverse it if it has already progressed)?  Well, don’t listen to me — I have no medical credentials whatsoever.  But you might talk to your doctor about some of the evidence presented below.

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