There is very little point
in having a series of chelation treatments if the person thus
improved is not going to take advantage of the improved circulatory
capacity which it provides. This should be seen as a second chance,
an opportunity to keep things right and to prevent the inevitable
deterioration which would take place if the same old habits of
eating, lifestyle and exercise were followed.
The tragedy of much of the
heroic effort which goes into surgical intervention for cardiovascular
disease is that it touches on just a part of a severely compromised
system. What is the longterm point or value of bypassing
a blocked region with an unclogged vein or artery if the rest
of the channels are already somewhat damaged and if little is
done to alter those habits and patterns which led to the clogging
in the first place? What value a new heart if the system it is
pumping blood through is silted up?
When chelation unclogs circulatory
obstructions this affects almost the entire system, and a host
of factors which could rapidly set the degenerative ball rolling
again if they remained behind, such as heavy metals and low density
lipoproteins, are removed from the body along with the metastatic
calcium. Even then it would be but a shortterm improvement
if the underlying habits which led to the degenerative changes
were not addressed, whether these involve lack of exercise, poor
stress coping abilities, smoking and alcohol abuse, dietary imbalances,
toxic encumbrances or any combination of these and other causes.
The changes needed to keep
the newfound circulatory improvement (after EDTA or surgery)
are the very ones which would have prevented the circulatory
decline in the first place and can be broadly divided into the
eating pattern followed and the many factors in the person's
life which lead so inevitably to arterial damage and all that
follows.
Those elements which need
to be seriously considered include:
- Changing dietary
habits.
- Providing specific
nutrient aids.
- Increasing aerobic
activity.
- Decreasing exposure
to smoke, alcohol and toxins.
- Learning stressproofing
techniques.
A prescription for a healthy
heart is a prescription for good health generally. All the same
features are present and these are now so well established that
it almost seems not worth repeating the same 'rules', However,
cardiovascular health is in such an appalling state that those
who know, and hopefully follow, most of the healthyheart
guidelines will hopefully forgive a brief repetition of the most
important points.
Diet
Fats
A great deal of agreement
exists (a rare thing in science and even rarer in medicine) as
to what needs to be done in dietary terms to meet the needs of
the cardiovascular system in a modern world. Expert committees
have deliberated and come to clear decisions on matters such
as the need for a reduction overall in the amount of fat that
is eaten.
The average West European
and American eats anything up to (and sometimes beyond) 40 per
cent of their total energy intake from fats, much of which is
of the undesirable saturated type. Various health authorities
such as the Senate Committee and NACNE in the UK advise reducing
this to between 30 and 35 per cent.
Nathan Pritikin, the revolutionary
health expert who developed a diet and exercise programme for
cardiovascular dysfunction (Pritikin, 1980), advised reducing
this to a miniscule 10 per cent.
Elmer Cranton suggests that
a more easily attainable (although still difficult) target is
20 per cent, virtually cutting fat and oil intake in half with
the majority of this in the form of polyunsaturated and monounsaturated
(olive oil) forms.
In practical terms this means
avoiding fat on meat and avoiding most meat derived from pigs,
cows or sheep as well as skin of poultry. This leaves game, poultry
apart from skin, and fish as sources of animal protein for those
who do not wish to adopt a vegetarian mode of eating. Game has
a fat level of less than 4 per cent as a rule (some beef contains
up to 30 per cent fat) and this is usually high in polyunsaturated
or monounsaturated fats compared with the less desirable saturated
form found in dairy produce and domesticated animal meat.
This highlights an important
message: not all oils and fats are bad for cardiovascular health,
indeed some are vital. We need essential fatty acids in our diet
(hence the word essential in their title) and we can learn a
good deal by looking at the dietary habits of people who live
in regions (such as the Mediterranean basin) where heart disease
is a rarity. Among the important differences in their diet is
a very high intake of monounsaturated oil (olive), which has
been shown to have a cholesterol lowering effect. They also eat
abundant fish, a major source of eicosapentenoic acid, a protective
factor for the cardiovascular system (and of course garlic which
reduces the adhesiveness stickiness of blood platelets).
Another Mediterranean bonus is the eating of the herb purslane,
a rich source of gamma linoleic acid (also found abundantly in
linseed) and an important source of essential fatty acids. Inclusion
of these factors garlic, fish (especially cold water varieties),
linseed and olive oil instead of other salad oils all act
to protect the heart and its functions.
No frying or roasting of food
should be done and dairy produce apart from skimmed milk
and very lowfat yogurt or cottage cheese should
be avoided.
Eggs
Approximately one person in
five is affected by a rise in blood levels of cholesterol after
eating eggs. The other four show little or no change in their
cholesterol levels after eating normal quantities of egg. It
should be realized that most cholesterol (which is an essential
part of every cell of the body) is made in the body, unrelated
to dietary intake of the substance but influenced by such factors
as overall fat intake, sugar intake, smoking and, in some instances,
coffee intake. The moderate eating of eggs (three or four per
week) seems therefore to be without danger for most people.
Carbohydrates and sugars
Cardiovascular health is improved
when refined carbohydrates play only a very limited part in the
diet. This means substituting wholegrain for white flour products
and white rice. Wholegrain products, brown pasta, bread and rice
are readily available and contain high levels of fibre which
helps clear excess cholesterol from the intestines (especially
oats), as well as providing essential vitamins, minerals and
trace elements, which are largely or entirely removed in any
refining process.
At present we in the West
eat around 45 per cent of our food as carbohydrate, with an average
of half of this as refined sugars and flour products. The expert
guidelines suggest that we should increase carbohydrates to around
58 per cent of our diet but with the simple sugars, etc., declining
to no more than 15 per cent of our dietary intake.
'Complex carbohydrates' are
the major nutrients contained in vegetables and fruits,
nuts, seeds and beans, and of course whole grains (milled but
not refined). So a diet which emphasizes vegetables at both main
meals with brown rice, pasta and/or bread, as well as abundant
use of fresh nuts and seeds (sunflower, sesame, pumpkin, linseed,
etc.) and the members of the bean family (lentils, chickpeas,
etc.), as well as fresh fruit to the extent that these foods
account for just under two thirds of the total food eaten
is the target we are set.
No wonder vegetarians have
such fine cardiovascular health.
Protein
As described under the heading
Fats, the
types of animal protein most likely to assist in achieving the
aims being set are game, poultry (minus its skin) and fish. In
the USA and UK an average intake of around 12 per cent of total
energy consists of protein, and this is thought to be a reasonable
level.
A useful strategy to enhance
heart health would be if this 12 per cent were made up of more
vegetable sources of protein (pulses, for example) and less from
animal sources. Again, the example can be given of the vegetarian
who combines nuts and grains, or pulses (bean family) and grains,
for their protein content, and who have an infinitely better
degree of cardiovascular function than do meat eaters.
Fibre
Eating a diet rich in complex
carbohydrates ensures adequate fibre, which is necessary for cholesterol
clearance from the digestive tract. Not all fibres are the same,
however: oat bran acts quite differently (in cholesterol mopping
terms, that is) from wheat bran (see Chapter 12). Authorities
in the West urge that we eat up to 30 grams of fibre daily, with
half of this from cereals and the rest from fruits and vegetables.
In rural Africa (where cardiovascular disease is rare) the intake
of fibre is anything up to 150 grams daily. Interestingly, when
people from the African countryside migrate to cities and adopt
a diet low in fibre their cardiovascular health declines rapidly.
The best cholesterollowering
fibres are found in oats, fruits and vegetables and the leading
providers are: blackberries, bananas, apricots, apples, raspberries,
prunes, passion fruit, damsons, haricot beans, bean sprouts,
broccoli, cabbage, carrots, celery, lentils, mushrooms, peas
and potatoes.
Alcohol
This is an area of some debate,
with a very small amount of alcohol (1 1/2 glasses of wine or
1 pint of beer daily) being shown to enhance cardiovascular function
(but with some negative effect on liver function) and anything
more than that amount having negative effects. Overall health
experts agree that alcohol is undesirable but that these limits
are fairly safe.
Coffee
The drinking of boiled coffee
in any quantity has been shown to increase levels of cholesterol
in the blood.
Salt
Because of its known association
with increased blood pressure (a major factor in cardiovascular
degeneration), salt intake should be reduced dramatically from
its current level of around 12 grams daily to no more than 3
grams per day per person, none of which should be added at table.
It is now known that damage from salt starts when we are very
young and if children can be taught to enjoy unsalted food they
could be saved a good deal of distress later in life.