Posted on 08/31/2009 11:16:43 AM PDT by decimon
I take 1000 to 2000 daily. It dropped my Tryglicerides from 300 to 160 in 6 months.
Really? I should do this. Thanks.
200mg is a very low dose. I don’t know what the equivalent would be, but I would think eating sashimi a couple times per week would be many times more than this.
I haven’t kept up since I left the fish biz 7 years ago, but at that time the consensus was to try and eat actual oily fish rather than the Omega supplements.
Let me know how it comes out. Worked for me.
Yep. My pills come in 1000mg doses.
I read free range chicken eggs are high in Omega 3. I hope so, I eat enough of them. Hoepfully it fights off my beer drinking, cigar smoking ways.
Bookmarked. Thanks for posting.
Mine are 1200mg with 360mg omega-3. DHA and EPA are listed but not as to amounts.
http://www.escardio.org/communities/eacpr/lifestyle-cvd-literature/volume10/pages/page24.aspx
Daily exercise training may lead to better long-term, event-free survival than stent angioplasty in patients with stable coronary artery disease (CAD) who receive optimal medical treatment, a pilot study suggests.
Coronary revascularization using percutaneous techniques is widely used in the treatment of CAD patients, the researchers note.
They add that, in patients with stable CAD, regular physical exercise training has been shown to improve functional work capacity, myocardial perfusion, and 1-year, event-free survival.
To investigate its long-term benefits further, Sven Moebius-Winkler (Leipzig Heart Center, Germany) and colleagues randomly assigned 101 stable CAD patients to stent angioplasty or conservative management with a strategy that included a daily exercise program.
Both sets of patients received optimised medical standard therapy, the team reported at the European Society of Cardiology EuroPRevent 2009 meeting in Stockholm, Sweden. Clinical status was assessed initially and at follow-up visits using the Canadian Cardiovascular Society classification.
The primary composite endpoint was death from any cause, nonfatal myocardial infarction, cerebrovascular accident, need for any revascularization procedure due to unstable angina, and hospitalization for worsening angina.
Event-free survival at 5 years was significantly higher in the 51 patients receiving exercise training compared with the 50 stented patients, at 63% versus 40%, respectively. During this period, 36 cardiovascular events occurred in 19 patients from the training group compared with 55 events in 30 patients from the stent group.
Based on their findings, the researchers concluded: At long-term follow up of 5 years, daily exercise training additionally to optimal medical treatment in stable CAD patients leads to a better event free survival rate compared with stent angioplasty.
I have some 500mg Krill oil that has 90mg DHA, if that helps at all.
That’s good to know. Thanks for the post.
1000mg of fish oil only contains about 120 mg of DHA.
L-Argnine is an amino acid that can clear clogged arteries, google it, not recommended though for those that have had a heart attack already, it’s the modern wonder of of the heart.
Spelled it wrong, that’s “L-Arginine” I take 500 mg a day, but take breaks from it.
Did they say why it’s not recommended if one already had a heart attack?
Found this too:
"People with kidney disease and those who take ACE inhibitors or potassium sparing diuretics should not use supplemental L-arginine unless they are under professional supervision."
Anyone deciding to take it should probably do some reading first, as you suggest.
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