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Eating Healthy for your Heart
Your heart is one of the most important organs in the
body, and the foods you put into your mouth effect how
your heart operates. If you want your heart to be strong
and able to pump blood as well as possible all over your
body, it is important for you to eat a healthy diet.
Heart-healthy foods are readily available in the supermarket,
so choose some that work for your personal likes and you
should be able to help prevent heart disease in your own
body.
Cholesterol is the most important thing when it comes
to eating heart-healthy foods. There are both good cholesterols
and bad cholesterols. Good cholesterols are called HDL,
and their job in the body is to take excess bad cholesterol
(LDL) to the liver, where it can be broken down and then
will leave the body.
LDL is actually not needed by your body at all from foods.
Our bodies make enough of this kind of cholesterol on
its own. It is the LDL cholesterol that hurts our hearts,
not the HDL cholesterol, which actually helps our hearts
be reducing the amount of LDL cholesterol in the body.
LDL stands for low-density lipoproteins. Because this
substance has a low density, it does not flow through
the blood stream as readily as it should. The red blood
cells easily release the LDL cholesterol and it sticks
to the walls of your blood vessels, especially in the
arteries leading to your heart. This is bad for a number
of reasons.
First, when the LDL cholesterol builds up on your arteries,
it reduces the amount of blood that can fit through at
a time, since the artery becomes smaller. That means your
heart has to pump harder and faster in order to allow
the same amount of blood to flow through your body.
Over time, this makes your heart tired and not as strong.
In the worst-case scenario, the blood vessel becomes so
built up with LDL cholesterol that your artery could close
completely. When this happens, your heart essentially
panics because it is not getting the blood it needs and
it starts beating rapidly to try to pump the blood.
This causes a heart attack.
You can also have a heart attack from LDL cholesterol
build up if a piece of the build-up, called plaque, breaks
off and floats down the blood stream. When it reaches
a smaller part of the blood vessel, it will get stuck
and block the blood, which again causes a heart attack.
If the piece of plaque travels to the brain instead of
the heart, it will cause a blockage in this area of the
body, which in turn causes a stroke. Therefore, it is
simply important to cut out of your diet the foods high
in cholesterol so that you can prevent heart disease and
other problems in the body.
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