Make Yourself Heart Attack Proof


Interview with Dr. Caldwell , Jr.

Heart disease is the number one killer in America today. This is an interview between Dr. John Westerdahl, Director of the Castle Wellness Center and host of Tasty and Meatless with Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn, Jr., renowned physician from the Cleveland Clinic, and a pioneer in heart disease reversal research. Dr. Esselstyn talks about his research that shows how people can make themselves heart attack proof.

Dr. Esselstyn: We have over 500,000 people who will die this year of heart disease. There are 1.5 million people who will have been diagnosed with a new heart attack. There will be 3 million so-called “silent heart attacks.” They will have severe ingestion and this will be when the heart attack occurs. The exciting thing is the lesson we learned from World War II, when the powers of Germany occupied Norway. They took away their livestock, their chickens, goats, lamb, and sheep. As a result, from 1939 to 1945, these countries were largely subsisting on a plant-based diet of grains, legumes, vegetables, and fruits. There is documentation in Norway on how deaths from cardiovascular disease from stroke and heart attacks during this time plummeted. If we adapt the plant-based nutrition of these countries and if we achieve the same low blood cholesterol and blood fat levels that means we also ought to be able to arrest this disease. That was the basic thesis behind the research that I started in 1985.

Dr. Westerdahl: I’m very excited about the research you’ve been doing because you have conducted the longest running study showing that heart disease is reversible through a healthy meatless diet. Tell us more about that.

Dr. Esselstyn: Back in 1995 after my wife and I had been eating a plant-based diet for a year and our cholesterol levels had plummeted, I went to our cardiology department and proposed a study that would take patients with severe heart disease and see if we can reduce their blood sugar, blood fat, and blood cholesterol. They were enthusiastic and we ended up with a group of 24 patients who were so severely ill with this disease that a number of them were advise to go home and get ready to die. We put them on a plant-based diet with no dairy or meat protein and we experienced exciting results. Their angina began to disappear, their heart pain lessened, and they lost weight. After 5 years, we repeated a number of their angiograms, which shows the outline of their arteries, and we found striking results. There was dramatic reversal of the heart disease and this was so empowering to these patients.

Dr. Westerdahl: So if we have a viewer today that may have heart disease, arteriosclerosis, or high cholesterol, what things do they need to do? What kind of results can they experience on this meatless diet that you recommend?

Dr. Esselstyn: If they are absolutely eating a strict plant based diet then they really can abolish heart disease. They need to check their cholesterol on a regular basis (every 2 to 6 weeks) and make sure that their total cholesterol is under 150 and their LDL, the bad cholesterol, is under 80. I have an example of a young surgeon who replaced me as chairman of the Breast Cancer Task Force. In 1996, at age 44, with cholesterol of 156, he had a heart attack after finishing surgery one day. His angiogram and his coronary arteries were actually quite good, but the lower part of the main artery and the front of the heart was completely diseased and it was too long a segment for those common interventions. He couldn’t have a bypass and he couldn’t have an angioplasty and he was very depressed. My wife and I had him out to the house and we counseled him about changing his diet to a meatless one. He decided to do it and decided not to take any cholesterol lowering drugs. He became the absolute personification of commitment to this program. 30 months later, he got another angiogram and that diseased segment of his coronary artery was completely healed. His disease was gone and now his life is so solid, so empowered because he has absolute zero fear of this disease. He has made himself heart attack proof.

Should people who don’t have heart disease also go on a plant-based diet? Absolutely and this is why. We did autopsies on the deceased bodies of the battle casualties of the wars in Korea and Vietnam. These young men were an average age of 21 years at the time that we examined their coronary arteries and already 80% had gross evidence of coronary artery disease. Of course a doctor had not diagnosed these young men with coronary artery disease but their arteries were already loaded with it. What was going to happen to them 20 or 30 years later?

Another consequence of eating the Standard American Diet is that at the age of 50, most Americans begin developing unidentified white spots in their brain that we now know are tiny little strokes. We see this repeatedly when people come in for MRI tests. Even if someone doesn’t have symptoms of coronary heart disease, these little strokes can begin to develop until the memory goes sour when they reach age 70 and they lose their cognition. These strokes come from too much cholesterol and fat from meat protein and dairy. There are so many other diseases besides heart disease that you are going to encounter if you continue to eat the Standard American Diet. Why do you want to have the opportunity to go into your senior years and not have all your cognition, all your intellect right on top? Why would you want to be someone who has severe personality changes, multiple strokes, in a rest home or nursing home? Eat a plant-based diet so that you can be there to enjoy your family, your children, your grandchildren and ideally your great great grand children!

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Bob, Biggest Loser recipe for Roasted Wild Mushroom, leeks & Fennel Salad from biggest loser episode 5 season 10

Biggest loser vegan meal at Bob's home

Here is the recipe for the recipe for Roasted Wild Mushroom, leeks & Fennel Salad from episode 5

Bob is going to make a completely vegan meal for the contestants, which is how he eats. A friend of his who is a great cook made dinner. There’s roasted wild mushroom leek and fennel salad, an heirloom tomatoes and basil leaf salad, broccolini with pine nuts, roasted sweet corn, and roasted cauliflower.

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Fat Sick and Nearly Dead

He used to be severly overweight but after struggling with conventional medicines, Joe Cross turned to a 60-day juice fast. Hear more of his remarkable story here and catch the free movie premiere tonight in Richmond at the Byrd. here is the video replay

http://www.wtvr.com/videobeta/311ffdea-71db-4f0f-acca-8e6dcc12de63/Community/-Fat-Sick-Nearly-Dead

100 pounds overweight, loaded up on steroids and suffering from a debilitating autoimmune disease, Joe Cross is at the end of his rope and the end of his hope. In the mirror he saw a 310lb man whose gut was bigger than a beach ball and a path laid out before him that wouldn’t end well– with one foot already in the grave, the other wasn’t far behind. FAT, SICK & NEARLY DEAD is an inspiring film that chronicles Joe’s personal mission to regain his health.

With doctors and conventional medicines unable to help long-term, Joe turns to the only option left, the body’s ability to heal itself. He trades in the junk food and hits the road with juicer and generator in tow, vowing only to drink fresh fruit and vegetable juice for the next 60 days. Across 3,000 miles Joe has one goal in mind: To get off his pills and achieve a balanced lifestyle.

Dr. Fuhrman oversees Joe’s medical care along the way and is featured throughout the film providing him with guidance, support, and encouragement.

While talking to more than 500 Americans about food, health and longevity, it’s at a truck stop in Arizona where Joe meets a truck driver who suffers from the same rare condition. Phil Staples is morbidly obese weighing in at 429 lbs; a cheeseburger away from a heart-attack. As Joe is recovering his health, Phil begins his own epic journey to get well.

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Bob goes vegan on the Biggest Loser Episode

Bob Harper Biggest Loser vegan

, vegan and trainer for NBC’s The , will serve a vegan meal to the show’s contestants on the October 12 episode. The meal will take place at  Bob Harper’s home, where chef Curtis Stone will also give a lesson in healthy desserts. “I enjoy living a plant-based diet because it makes me feel clear headed and strong, not to mention my genetically high cholesterol dropped more than 100 points,” Harper said in a June 2010 interview with VegNews. “That was all the motivation I needed.” The Biggest Loser began its 10th season, with a theme of “Pay It Forward,” on September 21.

We will post the recipe later today ok here it is http://ticketforhealth.com/eat_to_live/vegan-recipes-from-last-night%E2%80%99s-biggest-loser-bob-harper-from-the-biggest-loser/

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Kids who ate 12 hot dogs a month had nine times risk of developing leukemia.

Lunch meat and hot dogs. Kids love hot dogs, bologna, and other processed meats, but they are full of potentially carcinogenic nitrates and nitrites, sodium, saturated fat, and artificial colors and fillers. A study in Los Angeles found that kids who ate 12 hot dogs a month had nine times the risk of developing leukemia.1And more health risks are being discovered all the time. Leaf through any research about kids’ nutrition, and you’re bound to read about the bane of the cafeteria—Oscar Mayer’s Lunchables. These and similar prepackaged lunches are loaded with processed meats and crackers made with hydrogenated oils. These innocent-looking meals can boast fat counts of up to 38 grams. That’s as much fat as a Burger King Whopper and over half the recommended daily allowance of fat for anadult. Instead: Get unprocessed meats, like lean turkey breast, chicken, tuna, or roast beef. Use whole wheat bread for sandwiches; or if your kid’s dying for Lunchables, fill a small plastic container with whole-grain, low-fat crackers, lean, unprocessed meat, and low-fat cheese. This can be another great time to get out the cookie cutters to make healthy sandwiches more fun. For hot dogs, read labels carefully. Turkey dogs are usually a good bet, but some are pumped up with a fair amount of chemicals and extra fat to disguise their fowl origins. Look for low levels of fat, low sodium, and a list of ingredients that you recognize. There are some tasty veggie dogs on the market, although a good dealof trial and error may be involved for the choosy child.

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