Diet or Exercise, What is Good for Your Heart Health?
The answer wouldn't be quite straight-forward as you’d hope.
It’s the age-old question: Is diet, exercise, or a combination of both the best way to protect your heart?
That’s likely because gaining weight sparks microscopic damage to your blood vessels and other tissues, says lead researcher Edward Weiss, Ph.D., associate professor of nutrition and dietetics at Saint Louis University.
It’s this coronary artery blockage that causes heart attacks, Weiss says.
But by reducing weight, you lower the system-wide inflammation that can wreak havoc on your heart.
So does that mean you can eat whatever you’d like as long as you exercise enough to lose weight? Or that you can stop hitting the gym, as long as you cut your food intake to drop some pounds?
It’s not quite that simple: Combining diet and exercise together likely exerts additional health benefits like lowering bad cholesterol making them even more heart-protective as a duo.
What’s more, it’s easier for most people to lose weight with a combination of both diet and exercise that way, you’re only reducing your calorie intake a little bit, and upping your activity a notch, rather than the more drastic change you’d have to make with only one or the other to see results.
So make a diet and exercise combo your move: Even shooting to lose as little as 5 percent of your weight can make a big difference in your heart risk.
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