Showing posts with label health tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health tips. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Billion Hearts Beating campaign against Heart disease

Apollo Hospital one of leading super speciality Hospitals in India in association with The Times of India, conducts Billion Hearts Beating campaign against Heart disease.It is estimated that Indians are nearly four times more susceptible to heart attacks with 25% of attacks happening to people under the age of 40.

Studies over the last 60 years show an alarmingly high rate of coronary heart disease and premature heart disease among Indians.It isn’t easy to become all heart-healthy overnight. Good news is that scientific evidence indicates 7 risk factors, which, if addressed, can significantly reduce the risk of heart disease.


The seven risk factors

Scientific evidence indicates 7 risk factors, which, if addressed, can significantly reduce the risk of heart disease-even reverse it! Following are 7 risk factors for risk of heart disease.
  1. Smoking: Smokers risk a heart attack twice as much as non-smokers.So if you smoke, quit right now. It isn’t easy, but it’s possible. Smoking is also the most preventable risk factor. Please remember that non-smokers who are exposed to passive smoking are at an increased risk. And that’s not fair.
  2. Cholesterol: A diet low in cholesterol and saturated and trans fat will help lower cholesterol levels and reduce the risk of heart disease.Regular exercise will also help lower ‘bad’ cholesterol and raise ‘good’ cholesterol levels. Please have your cholesterol levels checked.
  3. Blood pressure: Control blood pressure through diet, exercise, weight management, and if needed, medication.Like cholesterol, blood pressure interpretation and treatment should be individualized, taking into account your entire risk profile.
  4. Diabetes: Control diabetes through a healthy diet, exercise, maintaining the right weight, and taking medication as prescribed by your doctor. If not properly controlled, diabetes can lead to significant heart damage, including heart attacks and death.
  5. Lifestyle: Try to exercise 30 minutes a day, at moderate intensity, every day.Simple leisure-time activities like gardening or walking can lower your risk of heart disease.
  6. Eating: Eat a heart-healthy diet, low in salt, saturated fat, trans fat, cholesterol, and refined sugars. Eat plant-based foods such as fruits and vegetables, nuts, and whole grains.Try to increase your intake of foods rich in vitamins and other nutrients, especially antioxidants, which have been proven to lower your risk for heart disease.
  7. Stress: Poorly controlled stress and anger can lead to heart attacks and strokes.Learn to manage your time better, set realistic goals, and take up activities like Yoga and meditation. Use stress and anger management techniques to lower your risk.

TAKE PLEDGE TO GIFT SOMEONE A FREE HEART SCREENING

For every pledge taken Apollo Hospitals offers free heart screening to one deserving person.Taking the pledge is good for your heart. It’s also good for someone else’s. For every pledge taken at http://billionheartsbeating.com, Apollo Hospitals will offer free heart screening to one deserving person.

It isn’t easy to become all heart-healthy overnight. But the point is, you need to start somewhere. Take Pledge at billionheartsbeating.com and help one deserving person for free heart screening.

Source: http://billionheartsbeating.com

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Health Tips to prevent Heart attack by Dr.Devi Shetty


There was a chat, arranged by WIPRO for its employees, with Dr.Devi Shetty,heart specialist of Narayana Hrudayalaya bangalore a couple of years ago. Dr.Devi shetty suggested a very informative health tips for Wipro employees for prevention of heart attack and suggests best food and lifestyle to prevent heart attack. This tips should not only read but also propogate and give it to those who are not connected to Internet or aware of these things.









The transcript of the chat is given below.

Qn: What are the thumb rules for a layman to take care of his heart?

Ans:
1. Diet - Less of carbohydrate, more of protein, less oil
2.. Exercise - Half an hour's walk, at least five days a week; avoid lifts and avoid sitting for a longtime
3. Quit smoking
4. Control weight
5. Control blood pressure and sugar

Qn: Is eating non-veg food (fish) good for the heart?

Ans: No

Qn: It's still a grave shock to hear that some apparently healthy person
gets a cardiac arrest. How do we understand it in perspective?

Ans: This is called silent attack; that is why we recommend everyone past the age of 30 to undergo routine health checkups.

Qn: Are heart diseases hereditary?

Ans: Yes

Qn: What are the ways in which the heart is stressed? What practices do you suggest to de-stress?


Ans: Change your attitude towards life. Do not look for perfection in everything in life.

Qn: Is walking better than jogging or is more intensive exercise required to keep a healthy heart?

Ans: Walking is better than jogging since jogging leads to early fatigue and injury to joints

Qn: You have done so much for the poor and needy. What has inspired you to do so?

Ans: Mother Theresa , who was my patient

Qn: Can people with low blood pressure suffer heart diseases?

Ans: Extremely rare

Qn: Does cholesterol accumulates right from an early age
(I'm currently only 22) or do you have to worry about it only after you are above 30 years of age?

Ans: Cholesterol accumulates from childhood.

Qn: How do irregular eating habits affect the heart ?

Ans: You tend to eat junk food when the habits are irregular and your body's enzyme release for digestion gets confused.

Qn: How can I control cholesterol content without using medicines?

Ans: Control diet, walk and eat walnut.

Qn: Can yoga prevent heart ailments?

Ans: Yoga helps.

Qn: Which is the best and worst food for the heart?

Ans: Fruits and vegetables are the best and the worst is oil.

Qn: Which oil is better - groundnut, sunflower, olive?

Ans: All oils are bad ..

Qn: What is the routine checkup one should go through? Is there any specific test?

Ans: Routine blood test to ensure sugar, cholesterol is ok. Check BP, Treadmill test after an echo.

Qn: What are the first aid steps to be taken on a heart attack?

Ans: Help the person into a sleeping position , place an aspirin tablet under the tongue with a sorbitrate tablet if available, and rush him to a coronary care unit since the maximum casualty takes place within the first hour.

Qn: How do you differentiate between pain caused by a heart attack and that caused due to gastric trouble?

Ans: Extremely difficult without ECG.

Qn: What is the main cause of a steep increase in heart problems amongst youngsters? I see people of about 30-40 yrs of age having heart attacks and serious heart problems.

Ans: Increased awareness has increased incidents. Also, edentary lifestyles, smoking, junk food, lack of exercise in a country where people are genetically three times more vulnerable for heart attacks than Europeans and Americans.

Qn: Is it possible for a person to have BP outside the normal range of 120/80 and yet be perfectly healthy?

Ans: Yes.

Qn: Marriages within close relatives can lead to heart problems for the child. Is it true?

Ans : Yes, co-sanguinity leads to congenital abnormalities and you may not have a software engineer as a child

Qn: Many of us have an irregular daily routine and many a times we have to stay late nights in office. Does this affect our heart ? What precautions would you recommend?

Ans : When you are young, nature protects you against all these irregularities. However, as you grow older, respect the biological clock.

Qn: Will taking anti-hypertensive drugs cause some other complications (short / long term)?

Ans : Yes, most drugs have some side effects. However, modern anti-hypertensive drugs are extremely safe.

Qn: Will consuming more coffee/tea lead to heart attacks?

Ans : No.

Qn: Are asthma patients more prone to heart disease?

Ans : No.

Qn: How would you define junk food?

Ans : Fried food like Kentucky , McDonalds , samosas, and even masala dosas.

Qn: You mentioned that Indians are three times more vulnerable. What is the reason for this, as Europeans and Americans also eat a lot of junk food?

Ans: Every race is vulnerable to some disease and unfortunately, Indians are vulnerable for the most expensive disease.

Qn: Does consuming bananas help reduce hypertension?

Ans : No.

Qn: Can a person help himself during a heart attack (Because we see a lot of forwarded emails on this)?

Ans : Yes. Lie down comfortably and put an aspirin tablet of any description under the tongue and ask someone to take you to the nearest coronary care unit without any delay and do not wait for the ambulance since most of the time, the ambulance does not turn up.

Qn: Do, in any way, low white blood cells and low hemoglobin count lead to heart problems?

Ans : No. But it is ideal to have normal hemoglobin level to increase your exercise capacity.

Qn: Sometimes, due to the hectic schedule we are not able to exercise. So, does walking while doing daily chores at home or climbing the stairs in the house, work as a substitute for exercise?

Ans : Certainly. Avoid sitting continuously for more than half an hour and even the act of getting out of the chair and going to another chair and sitting helps a lot..

Qn: Is there a relation between heart problems and blood sugar?

Ans: Yes. A strong relationship since diabetics are more vulnerable to heart attacks than non-diabetics.

Qn: What are the things one needs to take care of after a heart operation?

Ans : Diet, exercise, drugs on time , Control cholesterol, BP, weight..

Qn: Are people working on night shifts more vulnerable to heart disease when compared to day shift workers?

Ans : No.

Qn: What are the modern anti-hypertensive drugs?

Ans : There are hundreds of drugs and your doctor will chose the right combination for your problem, but my suggestion is to avoid the drugs and go for natural ways of controlling blood pressure by walk, diet to
reduce weight and changing attitudes towards lifestyles.

Qn: Does dispirin or similar headache pills increase the risk of heart attacks?

Ans : No.

Qn: Why is the rate of heart attacks more in men than in women?

Ans : Nature protects women till the age of 45.

Qn: How can one keep the heart in a good condition?

Ans : Eat a healthy diet, avoid junk food, exercise everyday, do not smoke and, go for health checkup s if you are past the age of 30 ( once in six months recommended) for at least once in two yrs.