15.04.2010 Lifestyle Coaching: Changing Your Path, The Heaviness of Weight Management, The Wounded Heart: Heart Disease and You No Comments

San Diego Psychologist: Light Drinking Reduces Risk of Stroke & Heart Disease…but only if…

In the recent annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology in Toronto, a study suggested that the potential heart healthy benefits of light drinking are eliminated if you drink and smoke.  For non-smokers, they found that drinking 3-14 approximate glasses of wine lowered the risk of stroke about 37% as compared to non-drinkers.  They did not specify red or white (although many studies point to red wine as being more effective).  However, the study showed that these benefits were not found in the participants who also smoked.

Now, I would NOT recommend running out to the liquor store and starting to drink 3-14 glasses of red wine per week (if you don’t smoke) so you can reduce your stroke risk.  Also, one of the authors notes in other research, “the protective effect of moderate alcohol consumption was seen among both smokers and nonsmokers.”

Therefore, (and as always) please make sure you talk to your primary care physician or other health care provider(s) about the contents of this blog or the article/study it refers to before making any decisions about your health.  Article available at http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/news/fullstory_97536.html.

Dr. Schwartz

San Diego Psychologist

www.integrative-health.net

13.01.2010 Services Posts No Comments

The Heaviness of Weight Management

Weight management is your ability to sustain or manage a certain weight that you, or one of your resources, has determined for your daily living. Two of the most important factors (aside from how you chose your optimal weight for yourself) are diet and exercise.  Although being underweight can have health risks, much of the research focuses on excessive weight and obesity.

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13.01.2010 Services Posts No Comments

The Wounded Heart: Heart Disease and You

Heart disease is a general term that describes a wide variety of diseases that affect you heart and you blood vessels. These conditions include coronary artery disease; heart rhythm problems (arrhythmias); and heart defects you’re born with (congenital heart defects). The most common cause of heart disease is cardiovascular disease — a condition involving the narrowing or blockage of the coronary arteries (blood vessels that supply the heart) that can lead to chest pain (angina), heart attack, or stroke. Other forms of heart disease may include infections and conditions that affect your heart’s muscle, valves, or rhythm.

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