A study published in the
Journal of the American College of Cardiology found four out of five men could
avoid a heart attack if they give up cigarettes, cut back on alcohol, and eat a
healthy diet and exercise. It also concluded that adopting a healthy lifestyle
could dramatically reduce the risk of early death - and giving up each
individual bad habit lowers the risk. The earlier the men change, the more
protection against heart attacks they accrue, the Swedish researchers
found.
Men with the optimum
lifestyle were non-smokers who walked or cycled for at least 40 minutes per
day, exercised at least one hour per week and had a waist circumference below
37 inches. They also drank moderate amounts of alcohol, and ate a diet packed
with fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts, reduced-fat dairy products, whole
grains and fish.
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Men who exercised at least one hour a week reduce heart attacks |
The study also found
even in those who take medication, a healthy lifestyle as highlighted has an
additional reduction in risk for chronic heart disease.
Professor Akesson leader
of the research team said: 'It is important to note that these lifestyle
behaviours are modifiable, and changing from high-risk to low-risk behaviours
can have great impact on cardiovascular health. 'However, the best thing one
can do is to adopt healthy lifestyle choices early in life.'
The study followed
20,721 healthy Swedish men aged 45 to 79 over 11 years.

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