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Magnesium, Nature's Own Blood Pressure 'Prescription' By
Dr. Al Sears
I
put her on a treadmill once to give her a test and nothing happened. She
got extremely short of breath, but her heart couldn’t keep up. It was
still at
80 bpm. She couldn’t challenge her heart and make it stronger because
of the
drug. Over
time, beta-blockers will turn your heart into a fat, lazy, incompetent
water
balloon. You already had high blood pressure to deal with, now you have
a gross
deconditioning of your heart. How
did this happen? Because no one has messed up modern medicine more than
cardiologists. They’re
all about the methodology of using heart drugs and technologhttp://www.anrdoezrs.net/hk98biroiq5BA97DAD576EFA8B9?sid=hsyy, but are
opposed
to the general concept of analyzing your health and how to improve it. It’s
a true but sad state of affairs that a cardiologist can’t tell you any
more
about how to improve the health of your heart than the average person
you meet
on the street. They know virtually nothing about it. They
know how to use drugs. But the drugs are not health enhancing. In fact,
there
are no categories of cardiac drugs that I don’t disagree with. One by
one, I
ruled all the drugs out. For
example, if you are getting treatment for high blood pressure, you
might be on
beta blockers. But think of what cardiologists are doing there. They’re
now giving you a drug that blocks the regulation of your heart,
down-regulates
your capacity to get your heart rate up, and suppresses your heart’s
natural
ionotropic capacity to beat more firmly. Initially,
beta-blockers sort of work to artificially bring down your blood
pressure, and
your But
there are other steps you can take to lower your blood pressure
naturally. And
when you do, your chance of heart disease, heart attack, and stroke go
back to
normal. It’s as if you never had high blood pressure in the first place. Step
1 – Use Nature’s Own Blood Pressure “Prescription.”
I’m talking about
magnesium, your body’s natural blood vessel relaxer. I’ve used it in my
practice with great results. It
helps balance potassium, sodium and calcium, which all affect blood
pressure.
There are many studies that show the more magnesium you get the lower
your
blood pressure will be. Why
take a drug when this overlooked mineral can have the same effect? New
research even finds that if you get enough magnesium you have a lower
risk of
dying from any cause.
The study followed 4,203 people over 10 years, and
found that the rate of death from all causes was 10 times higher for people
getting the least magnesium.1
And the rate of death from heart problems was more than 50% higher for
those
with low magnesium. You
can get more magnesium by eating nuts, seeds, dairy products and dark
green, leafy
vegetables. But modern farming practices have depleted much of the
mineral
content in our soil, so there’s not much magnesium in vegetables any
more. Magnesium
used to be in your drinking water but water with high mineral content –
hard
water – fell out of favor because most people don’t like the taste. If
you can’t get enough magnesium through food, you can take a supplement.
I
recommend between 600 and 1,000 mg a day. Take it with vitamin B6. It
will
increase the amount of magnesium that accumulates in your cells. Step
2 – Toss The Processed Salt. Salt
itself isn’t bad. We naturally
crave salty foods. In fact, when your blood is at its healthiest, it’s
slightly
salty. Unfortunately,
the salt you find in most foods today isn’t even close to what Mother
Nature
intended. It’s bleached and refined. When they’re done making it into
the white
stuff that goes into packaged foods and your salt shaker it’s like
franken-salt, with residual chemicals from the processing. Try
to avoid the foods that have the most processed salt. Bottled salad
dressing,
cured meats (beef jerky, salami), processed cheese, salt-covered snack
foods
and pickled foods (like olives and dill pickles). Instead,
look for sea salt. It’s unrefined, and has all the minerals and
co-factors
nature meant salt to have, like potassium and magnesium. Regular
salt is almost pure sodium chloride. Natural sea salt has sodium
chloride, too,
but also has over 50 other minerals (including magnesium) with all the
co-factors and trace elements
nature intended real salt to have.
References 1
Reffelmann, T., Ittermann, T., Dörr, M., et al, "Low serum
magnesium concentrations predict cardiovascular and all-cause
mortality," Atherosclerosis
June 12, 2011 Note: The good folks at the FTC
require me to disclose that I am an affiliate of the companies that |
Health Supplements and You 2011