March 28, 2024

What it means to be heart healthy

So you're ready to make some heart-healthy changes in your life, especially with your diet and exercise? Perhaps you're wondering: Will it really make a difference? Do you really need to make those changes if you're taking medicine for your heart?

The answer is yes. Your lifestyle does matter — a lot.

Results from three groundbreaking studies examining the impact of lifestyle modifications underscore the power of healthy habits and the importance of focusing on total health to reduce the risk of cardiovascular diseases, according to the American Heart Association.

The studies were recognized among the top research advances in 2015.

Here are some things the studies found:

1. It’s not enough to just cut saturated fats. 

How patients replace calories when cutting saturated fats makes a big difference when it comes to lowering coronary heart disease risk, according to a study published in October in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. It is a significant finding, researchers said, because most people eat more low-quality carbohydrates when cutting saturated fats.

According to the study, replacing 5 percent of calories from saturated fats with an equivalent amount of polyunsaturated fats lowered heart disease risk by 25 percent. Replacing saturated fats with whole grains lowered risk by 9 percent.

2. Bigger increases in exercise reduce heart failure.

Guidelines recommend at least 30 minutes most days of the week. But to reduce the risk of heart failure, people should double or quadruple that, according to a study published in October in the AHA's journal Circulation.

In the study, those who exercised four times more than the minimum recommended amount lowered their risk of developing heart failure by 35 percent.

“This shows that the minimum recommended is good, but much more physical activity is better to really have a potential impact to prevent heart failure,” said Marie-France Hivert, M.D., an assistant professor in the department of population medicine at Harvard Medical School and chair of AHA’s physical activity committee.

3. Encouragement, support of a healthy lifestyle is so important.

The study, published in September in the Journal of the American Medical Association, used a low-cost automated program to send four text messages a week that offered advice and support to make lifestyle changes.

After six months, levels of bad LDL cholesterol, systolic blood pressure and body mass index were lower among patients receiving the text messages. Text message recipients also exercised more and were more likely to have quit smoking.

In general, the American Heart Association recommends these strategies to help protect your heart:

Eat a wide variety of

nutritious foods in the right amounts from all the food groups

Include lots of different kinds of vegetables and fruits, especially deeply colored varieties.

Include plenty of fiber-rich, whole-grain foods.

Choose fat-free, 1 percent and low-fat dairy products.

Eat fish, preferably fish containing omega-3 fatty acids (for example, salmon, trout and tuna) at least twice a week.

Select lean meats and skinless poultry.

Include legumes, nuts and seeds.

Limit high-calorie,

low nutrient foods

Reduce the amount of saturated fat, trans fat and cholesterol you eat.

Limit sugar-sweetened beverages and fruit drinks, and save high-calorie snacks and desserts for occasional treats.

Keep sodium to a minimum by limiting prepackaged foods and choosing unprocessed foods and products that are the lowest sodium available and using little or no salt when preparing foods.

If you drink alcohol, drink in moderation.