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[ What is Hypertension | Exercises
for Hypertension | Nutrition for Hypertension | Additional
Information ]
Nutrition for Hypertention
From “IndoIndians”,
for further details, please visit the website.
Certain nutrients in the diet can affect blood pressure. For many years,
there has been controversy over whether sodium affects high blood pressure.
Past research showed that sodium affected blood pressure in people who
were salt-sensitive but had little effect on those who were not. However,
new research shows that those who have lower sodium in their diets have
lower blood pressure overall, whether or not they have hypertension.
Also important is what is missing from your diet. Calcium,
potassium, and magnesium may help lower blood
pressure.
A diet high in processed or refined foods, such as canned and
instant soups, packaged mixes, and snack items, is low in these important
nutrients. These foods usually are high in salt as well. By eating
fewer processed foods, more fruits and vegetables (which contain potassium),
and more low-fat dairy foods (which contain calcium and magnesium),
you can increase your intake of these helpful nutrients and decrease your
salt intake at the same time.
Eating a diet low in both saturated fat
and total fat will help lower your blood pressure. To reduce your blood
pressure, you should follow the recommendations below so that no more
than 10% of your calories are from saturated fat and less than 30% of your
total calories are from fats in general.
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Rebuilding the Food Pyramid
The dietary guide introduced a decade ago has led people astray. Some
fats are healthy for the heart, and many carbohydrates clearly are not.
By Walter C. Willett and Meir J. Stampfer in the January Issue of
the Scientific American. Read
here for a better insight.
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The Dietary Approaches to Stop
Hypertension (DASH) diet
To significantly lower blood pressure, the DASH diet includes eating
fruits, vegetables, and low-fat dairy foods with reduced saturated and
total fat. Follow these daily recommendations for food servings:
Food Group |
Number of Daily Servings |
Milk and milk products |
3 servings |
Fruits |
4 to 5 servings |
Vegetables |
4 to 5 servings |
Grains |
7 to 8 servings |
Meat, poultry, fish |
2 or fewer servings |
Legumes, nuts, seeds |
4 to 5 servings per week |
You also may consider trying a vegetarian diet. In general, vegetarian
diets reduce blood pressure, although the specific nutrients responsible
for this effect have not been identified. The DASH diet could easily be
a vegetarian diet if legumes were substituted for meat. Vegetarian diets
tend to be higher in potassium, magnesium, and calcium, as does the DASH
diet. Vegetarian diets also are higher in fiber and unsaturated fats than
other diets.
To incorporate the DASH diet into your everyday life,
consider the following:
- Think about changing only your fruit and vegetable intake to start
with. Keep track of your intake and try to increase it slowly. Remember
to check what counts as a serving in the .
- Think about including fruits and/or vegetables in every meal.
- Take fruit to work or school as a snack.
- Try milk as a beverage. A glass of skim milk has only 80 calories
and no fat and is packed with blood pressure-lowering nutrients.
- Have a "skinny" lattè (caffè lattè made
with skim milk) as a way to add milk to your diet. If you don't drink
coffee, try a skinny almond milk.
- Make a baked potato bar. Serve baked potatoes with a variety of toppings,
including chili, broccoli, ratatouille, salsa, refried beans, and shredded
low-fat cheese. Be creative. You could end up with 4 or 5 servings of
vegetables at one meal.
- Use a variety of cut-up vegetables with a low-fat dip as an appetizer,
instead of high-fat chips and dips. Try some new vegetables.
- Make a stir-fry containing lots of different vegetables.
- Try some vegetarian meals featuring legumes (cooked dried beans and
peas). Add garbanzo beans to a salad; use fat-free refried beans; have
some split pea or black bean soup.
- Buy a vegetarian cookbook and try one recipe per month or per week.
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