Walk through the giant
fiberglass heart at Philadelphia's famed science museum, the Franklin Institute, and you
get a good idea of what your heart does all day. Arrows guide you through the
two-story-high heart, as you follow the flow of blood that surges toward lungs and
arteries with every beat. The blood enters the right atrium that pumps it to the right
ventricle, which squirts blood to the lungs where it picks up oxygen. The blood then
enters the left atrium from which it flows into the left ventricle, the muscular pumphouse
that sends newly oxygenated blood surging through blood vessels to the rest of the body.
Every part of you needs oxygen-rich blood to stay
alive, and so does the heart itself. It comes equipped with three special blood vessels
that keep it supplied. Shaped like the tubes on a coronet, they're known as coronary
arteries.
Normally, the insides of your coronary arteries are
slick and even, so blood flows smoothly to your heart. When you have heart disease,
though, the inside of the arteries gets clogged with a waxy mixture of cholesterol and
other substances, called plaque, that limits blood flow. Now the blood looks as if it's
surging through rapids. If the flow gets dammed up altogether, the result is a heart
attack.
Your heart isn't the only organ that can be affected
by this pernicious clogging. The arteries to your brain and other key body parts, like
your legs, can also get clogged with plaque. Cut off the blood flow to your brain, and the
result is a stroke. Limit the flow to your legs, and you're almost guaranteed to have
chronic cramps and leg pain. In men, too little blood flowing to the penis
can cause another related problemimpotence.
Plaque gets a foothold when a certain type of
cholesterol normally found in your blooda type called low-density lipoprotein
(LDL)accumulates inside the arteries. Some research suggests that plaque is more
likely to do this if the lining has been damaged. Once inside the artery wall, LDL can
undergo a nefarious transformation called oxidation that makes it highly dangerous.
Oxidized LDL causes inflammation and triggers a series of changes that usher immune cells
and blood-clotting proteins into your arteries, where they turn into the sticky, messy
play-school paste called plaque.
So anything that helps LDL to oxidize is the enemy.
And among the enemy's forces are a breed of marauding opportunists called free radicals.
Unstable molecules that are the unfortunate by-products of breathing and other essential
metabolic processes, free radicals are what oxidize LDL.
Smoking, which unleashes extra free radicals in your
body, seems to step up oxidation of LDL. So do elevated blood sugar levels associated with
diabetes. It's obvious, then, that you should quit smoking if you smoke, and take care of
your diabetes if you have diabetes, as your first measures to control heart disease.
Now, high LDLs are not entirely the result of
high-fat diets. Some of us inherit a tendency to produce more LDL than we need, Dr.
Peterson notes. But everyone can lower their LDL levels by eating less fat, particularly
saturated fat.
Exercise is also a key part of disease- and
age-proofing your heart because exercise prompts your body to produce a different kind of
cholesterol, called high-density lipoprotein (HDL). The hero of our artery story, HDL
actually cleans LDL from your artery walls, slowing and even reversing the buildup of
plaque.
- Big Savings on
Health Supplements