Kardea

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Kardea Nutrition Teams with The Cooking Cardiologist®

Kardea Nutrition™ is pleased to announce that it has teamed with Dr Richard Collins, a Mayo Clinic trained cardiologist, also known as The Cooking Cardiologist®, to advance an integrated nutritional approach promoting cardiovascular health and wellness.

“What you eat and how much you eat can significantly alter cardiovascular health,” say Dr. Collins, ”Certain nutrients can be very helpful. Others can be quiet harmful. The power of nutrition lies with the overall eating patterns and preferences.”

The National Institutes of Health and the American Heart Association have long asserted that dietary choices are the foundation of cardiovascular disease prevent and health promotion. The NIH recognizes that lifestyle choices, emphasizing nutrition “compares well with many of the cholesterol-lowering drugs.[i]” For some, food choices allow individuals to maintain healthy cholesterol, blood pressure and blood sugar levels without the use of medications. For others, food choices reduce the medications required to achieve healthy levels.

In addition to serving on Kardea’s Board of Advisors, Dr. Collins will join Kardea’s founder, Robert Leighton, in co-authoring The Kardea Gourmet: Great Science, Fantastic Foods and Cardiovascular Health. This book will provide readers with a clear understanding of how inflammation and cholesterol, blood pressure and blood sugar levels interact to affect cardiovascular health. It then will review the impact of specific nutrients and overall diet. Gourmet chefs from noted restaurants around the country also will be providing the meal plans that deliver the right nutritional balance and heart healthy nutrients including Omega-3s, fibers, plant sterols and antioxidants.

Sections of the book, including recipes, are posted on kardeagourmet.com . Updates are being added on a weekly basis. Kardea is seeking input from interested readers.

Founded in 2007, Kardea Nutrition™ LLC was launched to empower people to manage their cholesterol, naturally and nutritiously. Kardea Nutrition™ has since extended its scope to enable the power of nutrition to advance overall cardiovascular health. It products are currently available at many retailers throughout the United States including Whole Foods , Nordstrom, drugstore.com and Hy-Vee. Products can also be purchased directly from Kardea’s online store.


[1] Your Guide to Lowering Cholesterol with Therapeutic Lifestyle Changes (TLC), U.S. Department of Health and Human Service, National Institutes of Health, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, December 2005. www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/public/heart/chol/chol_tlc.pdf

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Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Aspirin, Cardiovascular Disease & Diabetes

Writing in a paper published online in Britsh Medical Journal, Dr Giogria De Berardis and colleagues conclude that "a clear benefit of aspirin in the primary prevention of major cardiovascular events in people with diabetes remains unproved."[1]

"It seems that not only in individuals with diabetes, but also in all other high-risk groups, the efficacy of aspirin for preventing the development of cardioivascular disease is lower than expected. It doesn't mean that aspirin is not effective, it means that the efficacy is lower than expected, and that means we need to select very carefully the patients who are more likely to benefit."

Nicolucci points to another issue that warrants further exploration: whether there are specific characteristics of diabetic that make aspirin less likely to function as expected.
"There's strong basic research evidence suggesting that diabetes can represent a particular situation associated with poor response to aspirin. "

De Berardis G, Sacco M, Strippoli GFM, et al. Aspirin for primary prevention of cardiovascular events in people with diabetes: Meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. BMJ 2009; DOI:10.1136/bmj.b4531. Available at: http://www.theheart.org/article/viewDocument.do?document=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bmj.com.

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