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Reduce Your Heart Attack Risk
with this
One Simple Adjustment |
|
If you want a healthy heart,
don't miss this simple strategy |
Do you need to make this one simple adjustment that lowers your risk of heart attack? Use the checklist provided
here to find out. By paying attention to one simple facet of your health, you can:
• increase your coronary artery blood flow;
• support production of the collagen that forms the connective tissue sac around your heart;
• stimulate the growth of your muscles and bone;
• support production of your red blood cell, therefore increasing oxygenation in all your cells;
• raise your ambition, confidence and sex drive.
To know whether this strategy is one you need to employ, check any symptoms that apply to you below:
• Loss of ambition
• Mild depression
• Fatigue
• Feeling dull, sluggish, frequently drowsy (lethargic)
• Loss of libido (sex drive)
• Low energy
• Decreased motivation
• Increase in fine wrinkles
• Sagging skin especially on your face
• Chest pain
• Loss of muscle strength
• Diminished muscle tone
• Diminished serum free testosterone on saliva test
• Pre-menopausal /postmenopausal bone loss
• Symptoms increase in stress
Next, check to see if any of these conditions or situations apply:
• you are in the time following natural menopause or andropause,
• you are post-surgical or chemically-induced menopause or andropause,
• you had chemotherapy or irradiation,
• you have premature ovarian failure,
• you are attempting to manage premenstrual syndrome,
• you have bone loss induced by taking cortisone drugs,
• you're managing wasting syndromes secondary to HIV and/or malignancy,
• you've had GNRH-analog treatment of endometriosis, or
• you've had adjunctive therapy for rheumatoid arthritis or SLE
The more symptoms you've checked in either list above, the more likely it is that you have low testosterone
levels.
How does this apply if you're female? It turns out that testosterone, contrary to popular opinion, is not a male
hormone only. In addition to being produced in male bodies, it is actually also produced by female ovaries and by
both male and female adrenal glands ( one third by ovaries and two thirds by adrenals).
In fact, testosterone is the hormone that triggers female sexual development during puberty and stimulates the
onset of menstruation. After that, female testosterone levels naturally vary during the menstrual cycle, rising
just before ovulation (and causing an increase in sexual desire at the same point when women are most fertile).
Whether you're male or female, your testosterone levels are likely to drop as you get older, especially if your
adrenal glands aren't working well. That's because your adrenals are supposed to take over production of
testosterone as your ovaries or testes involute during the midlife menopausal or andropausal shift.
Therefore low testosterone levels can be at the root of some heart problems, especially after this midlife shift.
To summarize how that's possible, consider that testosterone drives production of connective tissue - and
connective tissue - and that's what your heart is made from. Low testosterone causes not just a sagging face and
skin, but a sagging heart in which the valves don't align properly.
And inadequate testosterone levels mean you lose heart muscle, your heart loses connective tissue, your coronary
artery flow is decreased, your red blood cell production drops off, and all that causes weakness and shortness of
breath.
If any or all of this is happening to you, the easiest thing to do is not what you might think. No, don't rush off
to get a testosterone prescription. That's hormone replacement therapy and requires careful medical supervision
assuming it's not contraindicated by other factors. Instead, support your adrenals, because if they are
sufficiently supported, they will make testosterone according to the needs of your body.
And having your body make its own hormones is always the best choice. You won't have to concern yourself with
medical monitoring of blood or tissue levels because your body will do that job for you, automatically. And you
won't have any side effects.
So important is this topic, of learning how to support your adrenals, that it will be addressed in an entire
BetterHealthBytes issue coming up.
Pamela Levin is an R.N. and Teaching & Supervising Transactional Analyst with 500 + hours post-graduate
training in clinical nutrition, herbology and applied kinesiology. In private practice 42 years, she is the founder
of The Nourishing Company and founder and editor of BetterHealthBytes newsletter.
Pamela Levin, R.N.
February 11, 2013
For lots of information to support your better health and greater well being of body, mind, spirit, emotions and
relationships, and to request a topic you'd like covered, go to http://www.betterhealthbytes.com
Tags: heart health healthy heart how to have a healthy heart risk of heart attack mild heart attack cardiovascular disease risk factors
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