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Happy Together

Our brains and bodies are deeply connected, so it’s not surprising that emotion and stress can have just as much of an impact on cardiovascular health as diet and exercise. Helpful stress (eustress) may allow you to improve mental focus and get things done, but the unhelpful kind (distress) can contribute to heart disease, so it’s important to keep the two in balance.

the physical side
“You are what you eat.” The old adage has special significance for heart health. Diet has a profound effect on your body, so choosing certain types of foods (and avoiding others) can impact how well your cardiovascular system functions, says cardiologist Dr. Lauren Munsch dal Farra, CEO of PALM Health. She says it’s especially important to stay away from foods that cause inflammation in body tissues, including the heart and blood vessels. This means nothing highly refined or processed, overly greasy or highly sweetened, or containing a lot of artificial ingredients.

Dal Farra says harmful foods spur the release of cytokines, or inflammatory messengers, in the body and kick off the process of fatty plaque buildup in the arteries, which leads to heart disease. On the flip side, there are plenty of highly nutritious foods that support good heart health and should have a permanent place on your daily menu, according to dal Farra.

what to eat:

what not to eat:

other tips for heart heath
Washington University cardiologist Dr. Justin Sadhu says keeping your heart healthy means staying in tune with your whole body. The best way to do that? Visit your doctor regularly and be aware of key vital signs and health factors.

the emotional side
SLUCare cardiologist Dr. Lisa Alderson says mental health can have a profound effect on heart health. “One of the most striking examples we see is ‘broken heart syndrome,’ a condition that can appear when the patient has an extreme stress like the loss of a family member,” she says. “The person may experience acute chest pain similar to a heart attack. Whatever the stressor is, doctors think the syndrome may be related to adrenalin surging through the body.”

Alderson says stress, loneliness, depression and negative emotions in general can impact cardiovascular health, whether they are sudden or long-lasting. “We don’t yet have a good handle on exactly how different types of emotions like shock, fear or anger specifically affect the heart, but we know they do,” she notes. “Everything in the human body is interconnected, so whatever helpful things you can do for your body will be good for your mind, and vice versa.”

Dal Farra says managing stress for better health may sound like a difficult task in the midst of our busy schedules, but it can be accomplished. “One way we advise patients to reduce stress is by building meaning and purpose into their lives,” she notes. “Feeling more fulfilled in our daily activities can be achieved not just by removing negative experiences but by adding positive ones that help us understand ourselves better. Everything we do in terms of prevention and healing has a dual mind/body aspect. You can’t separate mental health from physical health.”

emotions & stress impact your heart

Source: Harvard Health Blog

postive daily practices 

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