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  • "How to Reverse Heart Failure with Diet"

  • It is a hopeful sign of the times when entire issues of cardiology journals

  • are not just dedicated to nutrition, but to plant-based diets in particular.

  • Dr. Williams, past president of the American College of Cardiology,

  • starts out with a quote attributed to Schopenhauer.

  • "All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed.

  • Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as..." like, well, duh.

  • And the truth for the benefits of plant-based diets,

  • plant-based nutrition continues to mount.

  • The evidence, we got; the problem is the inertia, culture, habit,

  • and widespread marketing of unhealthy foods. "Our goal must be

  • to get the data out to the medical community and the public

  • where it can actually change lives..."

  • That's like my personal life's mission in four words: get the data out.

  • Based on what we already know in the existing medical literature, plant-based

  • nutrition clearly represents the single most important yet underutilized

  • opportunity to reverse the pending obesity and diabetes-induced epidemic

  • of morbidity and mortality, meaning disease and death.

  • The issue included your typical heart disease reversal cases:

  • a 77-year old woman with heart disease so bad she couldn't walk more

  • than a half-block or go up a single flight of stairs, severe blockages in all three

  • of her main arteries, and referred to open heart surgery for a bypass.

  • She chose, however, instead to adopt a whole-food plant-based diet,

  • which included all vegetables, fruits, whole grains, potatoes, beans, legumes,

  • and nuts. Even though she said she was trying to eat pretty healthy before,

  • within a single month of going plant- based her symptoms had nearly resolved.

  • And forget about a block, she was able to walk on a treadmill

  • for up to 50 minutes without chest discomfort or becoming out of breath.

  • Her cholesterol dropped about a hundred points from around 220 down to 120,

  • with an LDL under 60.

  • But then, a few months later she must have started missing her chicken, fish,

  • and low-fat dairy, and went back to her prior eating habits.

  • And within a few weeks, with no change in her meds or anything, her chest pain

  • was back, and she went on to have her chest sawed in half after all.

  • Then she continued to eat the same diet that contributed to cause her disease

  • in the first place and went on to have further disease progression.

  • This one, though, has a happier ending. It started out the same: a 60-year-old

  • man, severe chest pain after as little as a half-block.

  • Decided to take control of his health destiny and switched to a whole food

  • plant-based diet from his "healthy" diet of skinless chicken, fish, low-fat dairy

  • that had been choking off his heart.

  • And within a few weeks, the same amazing transformation.

  • From not being able to exercise at all, to walking a mile,

  • to then being able to jog more than four miles, completely asymptomatic,

  • off all drugs, no surgery, off to live happily ever after.

  • Now, of course, case reports are just really glorified anecdotes.

  • I mean, what we need is a randomized controlled trial to prove heart disease

  • can be reversed with lifestyle changes alone. And guess what?

  • There was one, published literally 30 years ago, proving angiographic

  • reversal of heart disease in 82% of the patients,

  • opening up arteries without drugs, without surgery.

  • So these case reports are just to remind us that hundreds of thousands

  • of Americans continue to needlessly die every year

  • from what was proven to be a reversible condition decades ago.

  • The conventional use of case reports, though, is to present some novel results

  • in hopes of inspiring trials to put it to the test.

  • For example, a case report on a plant- based diet for congestive heart failure.

  • So not just coronary artery disease, but the heart muscle itself was so weakened

  • it couldn't efficiently pump blood, only able to eject about 35% of the blood

  • in the main heart chamber with every beat, whereas normally the heart

  • can pump out at least half; which is exactly what his heart was able to do

  • just six weeks after switching to a whole-food plant-based diet,

  • instead of choosing to get his chest cracked open.

  • The first report of an improvement in heart failure following adoption

  • of a plant-based diet, but not the last. A 54-year-old woman, obese,

  • type 2 diabetic, presenting with swelling ankles due to her heart failure.

  • She switched from her chicken and fish to whole plant foods.

  • She started out eating healthier and lost 50 pounds, reversed her diabetes

  • meaning normal blood sugars on a normal diet without the use

  • of diabetes medicationsand her heart function normalized,

  • from an abysmal ejection fraction of just 25% up to normal.

  • Now since it's not a randomized controlled trial,

  • all we can say is that her improvements

  • coincided with her adoption of a whole food plant-based diet.

  • But given the burden of heart failure as a leading cause of death,

  • how it usually just gets progressively worse, and the overall evidence to date,

  • a plant-based diet should be considered as part of heart failure care.

  • And look, we already know it can reverse her coronary artery disease,

  • and so any heart failure benefits would just be a bonus.

  • Now, we just need good strategies for healthcare practitioners to

  • support patients in plant-based eating.

  • Here are some excellent suggestions to pause and reflect on.

  • For example, doctors can use the Plantrician Project's

  • prescription pads and prescribe a good website or two.

  • While it is certainly true that many people would be resistant

  • to fundamental dietary changes,

  • look, it is equally true that millions of intelligent people

  • motivated to preserve their health are now taking half-way measures

  • that may provide only modest benefitchoosing leaner cuts of meat,

  • using reduced-fat dairy products. Most of these people have neither

  • the time nor the training to actually see what the science shows themselves.

  • Don't they deserve honest, forthright advice when their lives are at stake?

  • Those who wish to ignore that advice, or implement it only partially,

  • are certainly at liberty to do so.

  • I mean, you want to go smoke cigarettes, go bungie jumping?

  • It's your body, your choice. It's up to each of us to make

  • our own decisions as to what to eat and how to live.

  • But we should make these choices consciously, educating ourselves

  • about the predictable consequences of our actions.

"How to Reverse Heart Failure with Diet"

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Friday Favorites: How to Reverse Heart Failure with Diet

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2023 年 07 月 17 日
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