Sentences with phrase «heart failure risk»

Just this year, sugar has been linked to everything from increased cancer risk to increased heart failure risk to compromised brain function.
«Additionally, going from no exercise to recommended activity levels over six years in middle age may reduce heart failure risk by 23 percent,» he added.
Having more children was not associated with heart failure risk.
However, heart failure risk does increase with age.
«Exercising more, sitting less reduces heart failure risk in men.»
Harvard researchers studying the effects of whole grain cereal consumption on heart failure risk followed 21,376 participants in the Physicians Health Study over nineteen years.
Harvard researchers studying the effects of whole grain cereal consumption on heart failure risk followed 21,376 participants in the Physicians Health Study over nineteen years.
The study is the first to examine the link between heart failure risk and sedentary time, said Deborah Rohm Young, Ph.D., lead researcher and a senior scientist at Kaiser Permanente in Pasadena, Calif..
Heart failure risk more than doubled in men who sat for at least five hours a day and got little exercise compared to men who were very physically active and sat for two hours or less a day.
A recent prospective cohort study confirms a positive association between BMI and heart failure risk among men, but suggests a J - shaped association among women with T2DM (304).
Neighborhood Deprivation Predicts Heart Failure Risk in a Low - Income Population of Blacks and Whites in the Southeastern United States.
«When Kaiser Permanente published a study last week linking sedentary behaviors to a higher heart failure risk, it only further validated what one D.C. company's CEO, Kathleen Hale, has been saying all along: Sitting at work all day is bad.»
Omega 3s play important role in our diet as they decrease inflammation throughout the body, lower blood pressure, reduce blood clotting, decrease stroke, lower heart failure risk, and reduce irregular heartbeats.
Researchers followed 33,012 men from the Cohort of Swedish Men from 1998 until 2012 — or first event of heart failure — to determine if physical activity was associated with heart failure risk.
Sitting for long periods increases heart failure risk in men, even for those who exercise regularly, according to new research published in the American Heart Association journal Circulation: Heart Failure.
«Timing of menopause onset may increase heart failure risk in women: Shorter reproductive duration, never giving birth among factors influencing risk.»
In fact, light and moderate alcohol consumption both seem to have a variety of health benefits, including reduced heart failure risk, reduced heart attack risk, reduced stroke risk, reduced dementia risk, reduced diabetes risk... you get the picture.
A mutated gene, SLCO1B1, was found to be associated with high levels of blood fatty acid, which is a strong predictor for the development of future heart failure and the mutation itself has a direct effect on heart failure risk.
Since consumption of whole grain products and dietary fiber has been shown to reduce the risk of high blood pressure and heart attack, Harvard researchers decided to look at the effects of cereal consumption on heart failure risk and followed 21,376 participants in the Physicians Health Study over a period of 19.6 years.
This salt - related increase in heart failure risk was independent of blood pressure.»
Prof Jousilahti concluded: «Studies in larger, pooled population cohorts are needed to make more detailed estimations of the increased heart failure risk associated with consuming salt.»
Research with individuals having cardiovascular disease has also confirmed that moderate consumption of coffee is inversely linked to heart failure risk, with a J - shaped relationship.
The study, published May 15 in the journal Circulation, doesn't prove that exercise is directly linked to heart failure risk.
Participants who increased their activity reduced their heart failure risk by about 12 percent.
«In everyday terms our findings suggest that consistently participating in the recommended 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous activity each week, such as brisk walking or biking, in middle age may be enough to reduce your heart failure risk by 31 percent,» study senior author Dr. Chiadi Ndumele said in a university news release.
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