How
to Keep From Having a Heart Attack:
Do Less Aerobic Exercise!
By: Dr. William Wong, ND, PhD.
That
title certainly runs against the grain
of everything we've been conditioned
(brain washed) to believe in the last
30 years! After 30 years of lowering
cholesterol, avoiding salt, taking an
aspirin a day and running, what have
we got to show for it? Heart disease
is still the #1 killer disease in America. Plus,
we now have Alzheimer's, electrolyte
depletion, renal damage, intestinal hemorrhage,
and severely worn joints to show for
our efforts! So if all this hasn't
worked - what is the real culprit behind
heart disease?
Harvard's'
Framingham study in 1966 told the world
that if you lowered cholesterol to below
the then hallowed 244 mark everything
would be all right. At the same
time, one of their scientists was coming
up with a different theory but since
Framingham had taken so long to do and
cost so much money, that particular Ph.D.'s
findings were swept under the rug. In
fact, they were so swept under the rug
that he was fired for having the tenacity
of insisting that he was right. What
does a Ph.D. know when all of the learned
MD's insisted they knew better? (Without
getting into the turf fight between Ph.D.'s
and MD's I'll simply say that it's the
Ph.D.'s who tell the MD's what they can and
can't do and what science really says).
Well
guess what? It turns out that the
Ph.D. was right after all. (Harvard
has even quietly apologized to him but
have they apologized to us for leading
us down a wild goose chase the last 30
years?) Part of the reason his
work was suppressed was that it was not
likely to bring about the development
of anti this or anti that drugs to combat
the things Framingham said were wrong. Financial
gain over physiological truth. Financial
gain at the cost of peoples lives. Well,
that's the way the system works.
OK,
enough preaching - so what really causes
heart disease and what can you do about
it? Lately, medical statistics
have admitted a trend..... Healthy, exercising "30
Something's" are having heart attacks. On
examination their arteries were clear,
no major blockages. Their cholesterol
levels were picture perfect - just what
the docs want them to be. By gosh
these folks even did aerobic exercise
several times a week! And still
there they were in hospital beds and
mortuary slabs; felled by heart disease. The
lab work showed one common factor: Inflammation
of the blood vessels.
For
the last 30 years we've had the notion
that it was only arterio sclerosis that
blocked up our blood pathways. Those
dams in our arteries were visible and
removable either by surgery or chelation
treatments. But there was an insidious
culprit that could block off an artery
as completely as the sclerotic plaque
then disappear and not be found on examination. Inflammation. When
blood vessels swell, the size of the
opening that the blood has to flow through
decreases. If this decrease is
significant enough then whatever tissue
that vessel feeds is cut off from life
giving blood. If that swelling
happened in one of the arteries feeding
the muscle of the heart that area dies
and we have an MI, Myocardial Infarction
or heart attack.
It turns
out that this inflammation is easily
and cheaply dealt with. That's
why the Framingham boys wanted to reject
the inflammation study. It would
produce no money for the drug companies
in the form of patentable medicines.
Several
things are needed to reduce vascular
inflammation:
- Vitamin B 12
- Folic Acid
- Proteolytic Enzymes (or Systemic
Enzymes)
- Decrease in physical stress
- Decrease in mental stress
Also very helpful
for heart health is:
- Magnesium (the heart beats irregularly
without it)
- Potassium
- CoQ10
- Vitamin E
- Selenium
Lets
quickly go over what these nutrients
can do for you and get them into what
the title lured you here for in the first
place. Folic acid and B 12 were
found to significantly reduce blood vessel
swelling. The FDA has been hedging
on granting vitamin companies the right
to advertise this as it would hurt sales
of the "patented" heart medications.
Protein eating enzymes are superior ways
of reducing inflammation, eating away
at the fibrin that forms arterial plaque
and reducing c-reactive protein levels
(markers for inflammation). The
anti oxidant nutrients listed above,
Vitamin E, CoEnzyme Q 10, and the mineral
Selenium keep the blood slick, the heart
regular and prevent degeneration of tissues. Magnesium
is super important because it regulates
muscular relaxation and must serve as
a counter ion to the calcium that
causes muscular contraction. Calcium
channel blockers drugs keep calcium from
getting into magnesium sites of the heart
and causing a Contraction - Contraction
reaction instead of the usual Contraction
- Relaxation reaction. Would it
not make more sense to have enough magnesium
in the first place so that the proper
channels were filled with the proper
minerals and the contractions would not
go awry? What natural docs have
been advocating for 30 years has now
caught on. Our old friends at Harvard
are now IV fast push injecting 2000 mg
of Magnesium into heart patients during
periods of irregular beating and guess
what? The problem stops! (Don't
let the MD's claim to have invented that
one, as they have with nearly every natural
therapy they have "Integrated" into
their system).
Potassium
keeps heart beat appropriate to the task;
without it folks especially women, have
episodes of rapid heart beat. Now
stress reduction we've heard before so
I won't beat that dead horse again. But
heart disease as a result of exercise
is a new one most people outside of cardiology
or exercise physiology have not heard
about.
When
runners, especially marathoners, tell
me that they are running to attain healthy
hearts I sound off that "Jim Fixx
is dead"! For those
of you who may not be old enough to remember
the high guru of the manic compulsiveness
known as distance running; Fixx was a
god. His leadership inspired millions
to take to the roads running. His
training recommendations were law and
his advice the pronouncements of the
running lord most high. Then one
day something funny happened to him in
the middle of a run - he keeled over
and died! Of a heart attack no
less!!! Running fanatics world
wide were in shock. How could this
happen; maybe he had some thing congenitally
wrong with his heart; sure that it was
something mechanically wrong with his
heart from birth. But then other
marathoners began to follow, a famous
doctor from a renowned running magazine
went plotz followed by so many runners
that even the MD who popularized
the term "Aerobics" and advocated
distance running, Ken Cooper took notice.
All
of the running aficionados thought more
was better. The longer the workout...the
healthier the heart. (They were
actually making excuses for being compulsive
but we won't go there). Dr. Cooper
reworked his data, did more tests and
low and behold what did he say: "The
heart stops conditioning at about 24
minuets" and "anything over
3 miles- 3 times a week is done for reasons
other than fitness". Other than
fitness! Heresy; the running world
was aghast, it could not be so! But
so it is. Too much aerobic exercise of
any type, causes the blood vessels to
inflame from the overstress. This
inflammation leads to scaring of the
internal portions of the vessels and
this scaring is where the fibrin begins
to build, onto which accrue the other
components of arterio sclerotic plaque. If
the inflammation is serious enough in
itself, from the exercise and combination
of the other factors, then the decrease
in the lumen (diameter) of the blood
vessel from the swelling can in and of
itself cause a heart attack. Let's
work out the numbers as concerns aerobic
exercise.
The
true dean of cardiovascular exercise
and father of cardiac stress testing
was a Scandinavian exercise physiologist
named Karvonen. (There go those
uppity Ph.D.'s again)! His definitive
work in the 50' and 60's showed that
the heart began getting stronger (conditioning)
after a mere 7 to 8 minutes worth of
work. Cooper's early research also
found that 8 minute mark. So we
have 8 minutes as the minimum we can
do cardio vascular (CV) exercise for
and gain a positive training effect on
the heart! The idea that we need
16 to 20 minutes plus to attain CV conditioning
came from a mis reading of research done
by Tom Cureton, Jr. Ph.D. (another
giant in exercise science). That
research found that the plaque in the
arteries began to be worn down and the
lipids (fats) therein used as fuel in
between 16 to 20 minutes of aerobic work. The
research did not mean that the heart
did not condition before 12 minutes. But
many non-experts in exercise field (IE.
MD's, personal trainers and television
stars with workout videos to sell), understood
it to mean just that.
Dr.
Coopers follow up research set the celling
for CV conditioning at 24 to 26 min. After
that he said the heart stopped getting
an exercise effect from the work. We
will add insult to injury here by relating
the statistic that after 20+ years of
the "aerobics" craze, the couch
potatoes are living as long or longer
than their marathoning cousins. Heart
disease and severely suppressed immune
systems are killing the runners.
So;
with all of that said and done let's
set the parameters for safe and productive
aerobic exercise.
Remember
we mean to strengthen our hearts, clear
our vascular systems and build miles
of new blood vessels to lower the blood
pressure. We don't mean to reduce
manic compulsiveness or other psychological
needs by these exercises.
CV work
- minimum 8 minutes, top off at 24 minuets.
Do CV exercise no more than 3 times a
week. Period. Recumbent
cycles, semi recumbent cycles, orbital
steppers and swimming produce less arthritis
causing joint wear than the usual running,
stair climbing, ski machines, dance or
karate aerobics and rowing. For
most, running should be out of the question
as it destroys the knees, hips and
lower back. Treadmills are actually
worse than road running as it only mimics
running and is producing a slew of lower
back injuries. Think of it; in
true running you are propelling yourself
across a surface. In treadmill
running you are trying to keep form falling
on your nose. While the movement
looks the same, biomechanically it uses
the opposite muscles for different
reasons and hence the injuries. Ski
machines concentrate work primarily in
the flexor muscles of the hip creating
a lordotic or "ass backward" duck
posture and creating the conditions for
injuring the lower back.
When
it comes to aerobic exercise less is
more and when combined with the nutrients
and lifestyle conducive to a healthy
heart and a healthy mind then we have
a complete package for a healthy life. |