Simple Steps To Keep Your Heart Healthy And Beat Stress

Dr. Rajeev Kumar Rajput, senior consultant in Interventional Cardiology Department, Indraprastha Apollo Hospital

Stress causes all sorts of minor physical discomfort like sweaty hands and an upset stomach. When stress becomes a constant companion it can cause some serious negative consequences on our health.

Stress increases the plaque rate and it can accumulate in the arteries. It makes platelets sticky and prone to forming clots that can block these arteries. Stress can also cause arteries to constrict, starving the heart of nourishing blood and triggering chest pain or a heart attack.

Stress Can Increase Your Risk for Heart Disease

Stress is a normal part of life. Stress can come from physical causes like not getting enough sleep or having some kind of illness. Another cause of stress can be emotional. Stress can also come from less dramatic causes like everyday obligations and pressures that make one feel that you are not in control.

The body’s response to stress is supposed to protect you. But, if it’s constant, it can harm you. The hormone cortisol is released in response to stress. The high levels of cortisol from long-term stress can increase blood cholesterol, triglycerides, blood sugar, and blood pressure. These are common risk factors for heart disease. This stress can also cause changes that promote the build-up of plaque deposits in the arteries.

Even slight stress can trigger heart problems like poor blood flow to the heart muscle. This is a condition in which the heart doesn’t get enough blood or oxygen. And, long-term stress can lead to blood clots. This makes the blood stickier and increases the risk of stroke in the patient.

Common responses to stress include

• Aches and pains
• Decreased energy and sleep
• Feelings of anxiety, anger, and depression
• Impatience
• Forgetfulness

How to manage stress and reduce your heart attack risk

People respond to stressful situations differently. Some react strongly to a situation. Others are relaxed and unconcerned. Luckily, one can decrease the effect of stress on your body. First, identify situations that cause stress. Although difficult, try to control the mental and physical reactions to these stressful situations.

Reducing and managing stress through mindfulness, exercise, and hobbies is an important part of overall health, and it may improve cardiac health too. However, making lifestyle changes to reduce stress is extremely difficult for some people. Because of that, patients should take a realistic look at the stressors in their lives and modify what they can, without worrying too much about what’s out of their control.

Diet & Exercise For Healthy Heart

Two of the simplest yet most important ways to help your heart health are through diet and exercise. Improving your heart health is not difficult when you know how to eat and how to exercise.

Eating a healthy diet can help reduce the risk of heart disease and stroke. Follow these tips to get the most out of your diet-

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What one should not eat?

A heart-healthy diet limits some nutrients. These include:

Exercise

Exercise makes your heart stronger. This helps it pump more blood with each heartbeat. This delivers more oxygen to your body. With more oxygen, your body functions more efficiently.

Exercise can also lower blood pressure. It reduces your risk of heart disease and reduces levels of LDL (“bad” cholesterol). Bad cholesterol can clog the arteries and can cause a heart attack. At the same time, exercise can raise levels of HDL (“good” cholesterol). HDL helps protect against a heart attack by carrying fatty deposits out of the arteries.

When combined with a healthy diet, exercise can speed up weight loss. Regular exercise builds lean muscle, which burns more calories than fat. This helps you burn calories faster, even when you’re sitting still.

What’s the best type of exercise for my heart?

Aerobic exercise causes you to breathe more deeply. It makes your heart work harder to pump blood. Aerobic exercise also raises your heart rate (which burns calories).

Examples of aerobic exercise include walking, jogging, running, dancing, swimming, and bicycling. If you haven’t been exercising, try to work up to 30 minutes 4 to 6 times a week. Alternate exercise days with rest days or days you do a very different type of exercise. This will help prevent injuries.

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