WORLD HEART DAY- SEPTEMBER 29
World
Heart Day was created in 2000 to inform people around the globe that heart
disease and stroke are the world’s leading cause of death, claiming 17.3
million lives each year and the numbers are rising. By 2030, it is
expected that 23 million people will die from CVDs annually – that is more than
the population of Australia! Together
with its members, the World Heart Federation spreads the news that at least 80%
of premature deaths from heart disease and stroke could be avoided if the main
risk factors, tobacco, unhealthy diet and physical inactivity, are controlled.
National activities such as public talks
and screenings, walks and runs, concerts or sporting events are organized
worldwide by members and partners of the World Heart Federation. World Heart
Day 2012 theme :-" ONE WORLD,ONE HOME, ONE HEART" It's
a good time to pay attention to your heart - for September 29 is World Heart
Day. Heart diseases currently are the leading cause of death - especially in
urban and rural India. It is also estimated that by 2020, India will have the
largest cardiovascular burden globally, accounting for almost one-third deaths.
It
is estimated that Indians are nearly four times more susceptible to heart
attacks than Caucasians, with 25 per cent of attacks happening to people under
the age of 40 - unheard of in other populations.Indians are also genetically
predisposed to heart disease but experts say it is lifestyle issues that are
the real problem.
On
World Heart Day, Shalini gets you five important heart tips that will help you
keep heart disease at bay.
Spend less
time in front of TV: A
study published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology found that
people who spent more than two hours day on screen-based entertainment, had a
125 per cent increase in risk of heart attacks.
Avoid high
fructose foods, unlikely culprits: HFCs or High-fructose corn syrup, also
known as corn sugar, is the most common added sweetener in processed foods and
beverages. Although it is chemically similar to table sugar or sucrose, some
studies have linked it to increased triglyceride levels, which can boost your
heart attack risk.
Give up
smoking: Smoking
damages the lining of your arteries, and makes it narrower. The carbon monoxide
in tobacco smoke reduces the amount of oxygen in your blood making the heart
pump harder to supply the oxygen.
Get enough
sleep: According
to the Journal of the American Medical Association, too little sleep can
promote calcium buildup in the heart arteries, leading to the plaques that can
then break apart and cause heart attacks and strokes.
Get some
exercise: The American Journal of Medicine and the
British Heart Foundation second that exercising just for half an hour every
day, cuts down your chances of dying of a heart attack by 60 per cent.
Prof. John Kurakar
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