Artwork

Content provided by True Health Initiative, Kathleen Zelman, and Tom Rifai. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by True Health Initiative, Kathleen Zelman, and Tom Rifai or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Player FM - Podcast App
Go offline with the Player FM app!

Can We Prevent Dementia and Heart Disease?

32:37
 
Share
 

Manage episode 337786232 series 3383552
Content provided by True Health Initiative, Kathleen Zelman, and Tom Rifai. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by True Health Initiative, Kathleen Zelman, and Tom Rifai or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

In today’s episode, we begin our interview with Dr. Dean Ornish with a discussion about how to prevent and possibly reverse dementia as well as other chronic diseases. Dr. Ornish and his wife Anne posit a unifying theory that many chronic diseases are all driven by the same lifestyle factors and can not only be prevented, but in many cases, reversed.

Over the last 4 decades, their scientific studies have supported a unifying concept that a therapeutic lifestyle can collectively address high cholesterol, excessive weight and obesity, pre- and type 2 diabetes as well as early prostate cancer, to name a few.

And now they postulate that lifestyle changes can perhaps even affect the progression of early stage Alzheimer’s disease.

Although lifestyle change is not as glamorous or powerful as high tech surgical procedures in affecting a health improvement in patients, Dean and Anne Ornish and their team show how powerful simple lifestyle changes are in helping reverse chronic disease.

“When you change your lifestyle, it changes your genes,” Dr. Ornish explains. He adds, “What you gain is so much more than what you give up.” Dr. and Anne Ornish also point out that every (even small) step counts. They emphasize it’s “not all-or-nothing” but an approach that emphasizes a spectrum of lifestyle change.

The Ornish lifestyle program is one of the first Medicare covered intensive cardiac rehabilitation programs to reverse coronary heart disease, because it’s been proven to work. Visit Ornish.com for more information.

Our interview continues with a discussion about the influence of community, depression, social media and more, on chronic disease. Dr. Ornish gives his advice on how to stick to a change in food intake and other lifestyle habits, and how the Mediterranean diet differs from the Ornish diet for heart disease reversal.

But, the practical scientist that he is, he reinforces that cutting CRRAHP™ (calorie rich, refined and highly processed) foods, increasing fiber rich foods like beans and lentils and eating low total (and especially saturated) fat, no matter which “diet” you choose, improves health. And remember: What you gain is so much more than what you “give up!”

Key Messages on How to Prevent Dementia and Other Chronic Diseases:

In addition to lowering blood pressure, blood sugar, cholesterol and weight:

• Microbiome matters: the amyloid in the brain that’s often seen in Alzheimer’s really begins in your gut.

• Ounce for ounce, lentils and beans often have more protein than steak… without the harmful stuff.

• Food can be delicious as well as nutritious: you don’t have to sacrifice taste for healthy lifestyles

• Awareness is always the first step in healing.

  continue reading

29 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 337786232 series 3383552
Content provided by True Health Initiative, Kathleen Zelman, and Tom Rifai. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by True Health Initiative, Kathleen Zelman, and Tom Rifai or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

In today’s episode, we begin our interview with Dr. Dean Ornish with a discussion about how to prevent and possibly reverse dementia as well as other chronic diseases. Dr. Ornish and his wife Anne posit a unifying theory that many chronic diseases are all driven by the same lifestyle factors and can not only be prevented, but in many cases, reversed.

Over the last 4 decades, their scientific studies have supported a unifying concept that a therapeutic lifestyle can collectively address high cholesterol, excessive weight and obesity, pre- and type 2 diabetes as well as early prostate cancer, to name a few.

And now they postulate that lifestyle changes can perhaps even affect the progression of early stage Alzheimer’s disease.

Although lifestyle change is not as glamorous or powerful as high tech surgical procedures in affecting a health improvement in patients, Dean and Anne Ornish and their team show how powerful simple lifestyle changes are in helping reverse chronic disease.

“When you change your lifestyle, it changes your genes,” Dr. Ornish explains. He adds, “What you gain is so much more than what you give up.” Dr. and Anne Ornish also point out that every (even small) step counts. They emphasize it’s “not all-or-nothing” but an approach that emphasizes a spectrum of lifestyle change.

The Ornish lifestyle program is one of the first Medicare covered intensive cardiac rehabilitation programs to reverse coronary heart disease, because it’s been proven to work. Visit Ornish.com for more information.

Our interview continues with a discussion about the influence of community, depression, social media and more, on chronic disease. Dr. Ornish gives his advice on how to stick to a change in food intake and other lifestyle habits, and how the Mediterranean diet differs from the Ornish diet for heart disease reversal.

But, the practical scientist that he is, he reinforces that cutting CRRAHP™ (calorie rich, refined and highly processed) foods, increasing fiber rich foods like beans and lentils and eating low total (and especially saturated) fat, no matter which “diet” you choose, improves health. And remember: What you gain is so much more than what you “give up!”

Key Messages on How to Prevent Dementia and Other Chronic Diseases:

In addition to lowering blood pressure, blood sugar, cholesterol and weight:

• Microbiome matters: the amyloid in the brain that’s often seen in Alzheimer’s really begins in your gut.

• Ounce for ounce, lentils and beans often have more protein than steak… without the harmful stuff.

• Food can be delicious as well as nutritious: you don’t have to sacrifice taste for healthy lifestyles

• Awareness is always the first step in healing.

  continue reading

29 episodes

All episodes

×
 
Loading …

Welcome to Player FM!

Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.

 

Quick Reference Guide