Here are three simple tests to gauge your current flexibility level:
1. Lower Body Flexibility
2. Upper Body Flexibility
New results indicate individuals with low LDL cholesterol have a longer lifespan.
A study published in the Annals of Surgery and conducted at the University of Minnesota Medical School between 1975 and 2000 evaluated 838 heart attack survivors between the ages of 38-60 years-old. Out of the 838 participants 417 were instructed to go on a diet and 421 were instructed to diet combined with a partial ileal bypass surgery which bypasses the small intestine and location for cholesterol absorption. This is not a common surgery and typically reserved for high-risk heart attack patients who cannot tolerate statin medications. After 25 years, the participants in the second group had an increased life expectancy of one year.
Flexibility refers to the ability of your joints to move through a full range of motion. How flexible you are in a particular joint is connected to the muscle length that attaches to that joint and how far that muscle will stretch. Having flexibility in your muscles allows for greater movement around joints. The shorter and less flexible the muscle, the tighter the joint.
What Does Flexibility Have to Do with High Blood Pressure?
Gluten can be found in numerous food products. You must become a savvy shopper. Breads, cereals, pasta, crackers, cakes, cookies, gravies, and sauces may all contain gluten. Gluten may also be used in food additives like malt flavorings and modified food starches. You must read food labels and become familiar with terms that indicate the presence of gluten.
How do I shop for gluten free foods?
1. Increase your life span
Individuals who stay in shape as they age live longer, particularly when evaluating heart disease risk. An Archives of Internal Medicine study showed a workout a day may add ~4 years to your life. A sample from the Framingham Heart Study found individuals who walked 30 minutes 5 days a week lived 1.3 to 1.5 years longer than sedentary individuals. Boost your exercise intensity and studies show you may add 3.5 to 3.7 years to your lifespan.
2. Improve your quality of life as you age
Isn’t trying to figure out how to lose weight CONFUSING?! About the time you decide to incorporate a health change a new study comes out saying that it’s not so healthy after all.
I think this is SO frustrating, don’t you?
It’s time to hear the UNBIASED truth from someone who doesn’t have an agenda other than to give you the facts about what foods you REALLY should be eating to achieve a healthy weight and feel your best, and which ones shouldn’t touch your lips (despite the media hype).