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These 10 Clean Eats Will Unclog and Protect Your Arteries
www.theepochtimes.com ^ | December 17, 2018 Updated: December 17, 2018 | By Tiffany La Forge, Healthline

Posted on 12/18/2018 11:02:40 AM PST by Red Badger

Avocados are a delicious, rich fruit and a great way to treat your heart—and your taste buds. (Lisa Fotios/Pexels) =========================================================

Heart disease is the leading cause of death for women in the United States. An estimated 44 million U.S. women are affected by cardiovascular disease, causing 1 in 3 women’s deaths each year. One of the most common forms of heart disease is coronary artery disease which occurs when a buildup of plaque narrows artery walls and restricts proper blood flow to the heart and can lead to a heart attack. Coronary artery disease can be treated or prevented through lifestyle modifications. One major influence on disease management or prevention is your diet: Foods rich in fiber, omega-3 fatty acids, healthy fats, and antioxidants all have their role in heart health. We’ve rounded up 10 artery friendly foods and highlighted what makes them so great and how they can keep your arteries clean.

1. Avocados

Is there anything avocados can’t do? It turns out avocados are good news when it comes to your arteries, too. This heart-healthy fruit increases your “good” cholesterol while lowering your “bad” cholesterol.

Avocados are also chock-full of potassium—more than a banana, in fact. Potassium has been proven to help prevent cardiovascular disease and vascular calcification in your arteries.

Add it to your diet: Replace mayo with avocado and use in sandwiches, chicken salad, or tuna salad. Fan of smoothies? Drink your daily dose of avocado by adding it to your favorite blended beverage (bonus: it makes it extra creamy!). 2. Fatty fish

While the myth that fat is bad for your arteries has been debunked, it’s important to know what kind of fat you should be eating.

Like avocado, fish is packed with healthy fats, also known as unsaturated fats. Fish consumption is linked to fewer heart attacks. Their omega-3 fatty acids have been proven to reduce levels of triglycerides and prevent the risk for cardiac death.

Add it to your diet: Eat salmon or your favorite fatty fish, such as tuna or mackerel, one to four times a week to reap these benefits. If fish doesn’t float your boat, check out fish oil supplements. However, when it comes down to taking fish oil supplements or eating fish, the latter is considered the most beneficial for heart health. 3. Nuts

Nuts are a powerhouse when it comes to heart health. Rich in unsaturated fats, vitamins, and fiber, nuts are a solid choice when it comes to a healthy snack. Try almonds, cashews, or Brazil nuts—all of which are very high in magnesium. Magnesium hinders buildup and cholesterol plaque in arteries, helping to prevent clogged arteries.

Add it to your diet: For optimal heart health, the American Heart Association recommends three to five servings of nuts per week. Get your fix by learning how to create your own trail mix. 4. Olive oil

Tired of hearing about healthy fats yet? Of course not. They’re delicious! But we end our stream of healthy fats here with perhaps the most versatile and popular of them all: olive oil. The monounsaturated oleic acid (say that three times fast) found in olive oil protects your heart and significantly lowers your risk for cardiovascular disease and stroke.

Add it to your diet: Drizzle on your salads and use in cooking, but make sure you’re using the right type. To get all of this oil’s antioxidant and anti-inflammatory benefits, purchase 100 percent extra virgin olive oil (organic if possible). 5. Coffee

Good news for coffee lovers. This beloved pick-me-up helps keep your arteries clean. One study found that drinking three cups a day significantly lowers your risk for developing atherosclerosis, or clogged arteries.

If coffee isn’t your cup of tea, green tea has also been proven beneficial to cardiovascular health.

Add it to your diet: Drinking three cups a day, you say? No problem! But while getting your daily dose, it’s important to stay away from adding sugars or lots of cream. Try and make your coffee as healthy and beneficial as possible. 6. Turmeric

Turmeric contains powerful anti-inflammatory compounds that can help reduce damage to arterial walls. Inflammation levels have been shown to have a direct effect on arteriosclerosis.

A study on rats shows that this antioxidant-rich spice can reduce fatty deposits in the arteries by over 25 percent.

Add it to your diet: The easiest way to add turmeric to your diet is by making turmeric tea. You can also make our easy, five-ingredient golden milk. 7. Pomegranate

The powerful pomegranate has been shown to clear clogged arteries and improve blood flow. This is due to the free radical-fighting fruit’s high level of antioxidants, which stimulate the production of nitric oxide in the blood.

Add it to your diet: Drink pomegranate juice for optimal heart health. Buy 100 percent pure pomegranate juice with no added sugar or snack on pomegranate seeds. Pomegranate juice can be added to your smoothies or mixed into a festive mocktail, and seeds are great sprinkled on your morning oatmeal. 8. Citrus

Both antioxidants and vitamin C are good news for artery health—and citrus fruits have plenty of both.

Studies have shown that vitamin C has a powerful role in reducing heart disease risk and the flavonoids found in them help protect arterial walls.

Add it to your diet: Drink plenty of lemon water throughout the day or start your morning with a glass of freshly squeezed orange juice or a grapefruit half.

Also, keep an eye out for the bergamot fruit when in season or bergamot tea. Bergamot has been shown to decrease cholesterol levels as effectively as a statin drug according to research published in the International Journal of Cardiology and Frontiers in Pharmacology. 9. Whole Grains

The dietary fiber found in whole grains help improve blood cholesterol levels and protect the heart against disease.

Recent studies have also found that diets with plenty of whole grains are linked to thinner carotid artery walls. These arteries are responsible for delivering blood to your brain. Thickening of carotid arteries causes atherosclerosis buildup and increases risk for heart disease and stroke.

Add it to your diet: The American Heart Association recommends that at least half of your grains come from whole grains. The recommended daily intake is 25 grams of fiber each day for women and 34 grams per day for men. You can do this by consuming whole grains such as brown rice, whole-grain pasta, barley, oatmeal, or quinoa. 10. Broccoli

Like whole grains, broccoli is packed with fiber that’s beneficial for overall heart health. Cruciferous vegetables, such as broccoli, cauliflower, and cabbage, have been proven to specifically help prevent clogged arteries and protect against vascular disease.

Add it to your diet: Need some new inspiration to eat more veggies? Check out these 11 recipes that will make you fall in love with broccoli again.

Do you already include these artery-loving foods in your daily diet? For more ways to keep your heart healthy, check out our 28 best tips.

Tiffany La Forge is a professional chef, recipe developer, and food writer who runs the blog Parsnips and Pastries. Her blog focuses on real food for a balanced life, seasonal recipes, and approachable health advice. Visit her at her blog or on Instagram. This article was originally published on Healthline.com


TOPICS: Agriculture; Food; Gardening; Health/Medicine
KEYWORDS: arteries; avocado; diet; fish; heart; hearthealth; nuts; oliveoil; oneweirdtrick
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To: spel_grammer_an_punct_polise
"Any doctor with any sense will tell you that genetics plays the biggest role in heart issues."

True. Also, women don't get heart attacks, they give them.

121 posted on 12/18/2018 1:42:57 PM PST by outofsalt (If history teaches us anything, it's that history rarely teaches us anything.)
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To: outofsalt

Great. doing all this will make be be able to live to 150! Now who is going to pay for the nursing home for the last 70 yrs and change my diapers?


122 posted on 12/18/2018 1:45:54 PM PST by oldasrocks
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To: oldasrocks

123 posted on 12/18/2018 1:54:34 PM PST by outofsalt (If history teaches us anything, it's that history rarely teaches us anything.)
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To: BunnySlippers
We're just starting with turmeric oil. It makes a tasty addition to a stir fry. So does ginger oil. We prefer the high quality, high concentrate version from doTerra.

There are lower cost, lower concentrate versions out there, but they take more than a drop or two. The 15 ml bottles from doTerra are expensive but last and last.

Some people add them to soup stocks. We just prefer the stir fry because you can actually taste them.

We like Oriental food because it is not as much work as Indian and we spent a goodly part of our lifetime in Japan. The rice is way better as well.

124 posted on 12/18/2018 2:20:18 PM PST by Vigilanteman (The politicized state destroys all aspects of civil society, human kindness and private charity.)
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To: Bell Bouy II

I know what’s in Skippy-—been eating it for years.

.


125 posted on 12/18/2018 2:25:50 PM PST by Mears
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To: BunnySlippers; editor-surveyor

Well, this got me curious so I googled it some and it appears the bigger greener smoother avocados are a variety called Choquette that’s grown in FL. I’ve never had one that’s stringy but it’s definitely a waterier, less creamy flesh than the Hass, and it’s not as easy to peel. I looked at some pics of Fuerte too and it’s a too small and the skin color/texture is different than the big green guys. Interestingly, Fuerte apparently was the main CA export for decades but then was dethroned by the mighty Hass.


126 posted on 12/18/2018 2:40:20 PM PST by Yardstick
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To: BunnySlippers

Florida avocados mostly come from Caribbean sources. Often they are huge, with long strings and watery. It’s just another animal.
…………………………………………
Just a minute! Florida avocados are the best by far. I will NOT eat a Hass unless no other avocado is available. I live in Florida and have been eating them since I was little. Grandmother’s tree was loaded every year with hundreds of avocadoes she gave away to all the neighbors. Delicious!
Knowing how to choose an avocado in the market is the key. It has to have a certain feel before it is ready to eat. Have never seen a “watery” Florida avocado.


127 posted on 12/18/2018 2:46:05 PM PST by Mollypitcher1 (I have not yet begun to fight....John Paul Jones)
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To: Mears

Yummmm Hydrogenated oil


128 posted on 12/18/2018 2:48:31 PM PST by Bell Bouy II
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To: Bell Bouy II

You eat what you want to eat.

I’ll eat what I want to eat.

Two happy people.

Get it?

.


129 posted on 12/18/2018 2:50:45 PM PST by Mears
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To: Mears

Hydrogenated oils Yummy.....

Deadly and so easy to avoid, go for it


130 posted on 12/18/2018 2:54:45 PM PST by Bell Bouy II
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To: Red Badger

there’s zero research that any of these foods will “unclog” your arteries ... BS like this makes ignorant people think that certain foods act on arteries like Drano acts on clogged pipes ...

plaques in the arteries are not “clogs”, they are essentially scabs trying to cover puss-filled pimples of the endothelial lining of the arteries ... these pimples are fundamentally the result of chronic inflammation of the arterial endothelium due to a variety of causes, including a toxic diet, toxic smoking, hypertension, obesity-provoked inflammation, etc.


131 posted on 12/18/2018 3:00:00 PM PST by catnipman ((Cat Nipman: Vote Republican in 2012 and only be called racist one more time!))
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To: BunnySlippers
It takes practice. And like gardening, it takes daily...sometimes twice daily tending. They can go...just like

I'm getting pretty good at it.

132 posted on 12/18/2018 3:06:39 PM PST by Bloody Sam Roberts (Perhaps we should be less concerned about who we might offend and more concerned with who we inspire)
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To: Red Badger

I’m with ya. It does take a measure of control.


133 posted on 12/18/2018 3:08:02 PM PST by Bloody Sam Roberts (Perhaps we should be less concerned about who we might offend and more concerned with who we inspire)
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To: Neidermeyer

specifically, the form of K2 that helps to keep calcium in the bones and out of the tissues is the MK7 form. Too much of some of the other forms of K2 can be unhealthy.

A good brand of MK7-K2 is Jarrow. I usually take at least 5 times the dose recommended on the bottle and would take even more if it was less expensive, because all of the research with positive results used GIGANTIC doses, and it’s not really known how well much smaller doses work ...


134 posted on 12/18/2018 3:09:19 PM PST by catnipman ((Cat Nipman: Vote Republican in 2012 and only be called racist one more time!))
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To: Bloody Sam Roberts

Haha ... and don’t forget the brown paper bag. It really works if you need to speed up the process.


135 posted on 12/18/2018 3:10:46 PM PST by BunnySlippers (I Love Bull Markets ......)
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To: BunnySlippers
And I love salmon, but my closest market is Gelsons and one piece of salmon is $12.00 now. I’m going to have to begin poaching ,y own. Trader Joe’s has nice big filets! I agree with you about SouthEast Asian fish and avoiding farmed fish.

I tend to get frozen, wild-caught-by-Americans Alaskan salmon.

136 posted on 12/18/2018 3:24:10 PM PST by PapaBear3625 ("Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." -- Voltaire)
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To: editor-surveyor

Bookmark


137 posted on 12/18/2018 3:27:33 PM PST by Irish Eyes
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To: PapaBear3625

What is the taste difference?


138 posted on 12/18/2018 3:30:04 PM PST by BunnySlippers (I Love Bull Markets ......)
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To: BunnySlippers

Alaskan salmon is less oily than Atlantic salmon.


139 posted on 12/18/2018 3:33:38 PM PST by PapaBear3625 ("Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." -- Voltaire)
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To: editor-surveyor

That’s a good price


140 posted on 12/18/2018 3:35:33 PM PST by nikos1121 (With Trump, we have our own Age of Pericles)
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