Ernährung in der Prävention und Therapie der koronaren Herzkrankheit

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Ernährung in der Prävention und Therapie der koronaren Herzkrankheit. / Zyriax, Birgit-Christiane; Windler, Eberhard.

in: AKTUEL ERNAHRUNGSMED, Jahrgang 43, Nr. 4, 15.08.2018, S. 294-309.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungAndere (Vorworte u.ä.)Forschung

Harvard

Zyriax, B-C & Windler, E 2018, 'Ernährung in der Prävention und Therapie der koronaren Herzkrankheit', AKTUEL ERNAHRUNGSMED, Jg. 43, Nr. 4, S. 294-309.

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{45b128c3dcba4fe5af8f7e66300fd1fb,
title = "Ern{\"a}hrung in der Pr{\"a}vention und Therapie der koronaren Herzkrankheit",
abstract = "Diet and lifestyle have an important impact on the development of cardiovascular risk factors, the manifestation of coronary heart disease, and the prognosis after a cardiovascular event. Even in the presence of strong genetic predisposition patients benefit from a healthy lifestyle with respect to coronary heart disease. Much of the effectiveness of lifestyle interventions is supposedly due to their broad influence on all major risk factors as there are overweight, central obesity, lipid disorders, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus type 2, but also due to independent mechanisms. A Mediterranean diet has been repeatedly shown to reduce cardiovascular events by exchange of several nutrients among others preferring olive oil or nuts, even without measurable impact on conventional risk factors. A diet rich in fruit, vegetables and low-fat milk products and limited in salt and calories if appropriate is considered evidence-based for reducing elevated blood pressure and prevention of coronary heart disease. In terms of insulin resistance and prevention of type 2 diabetes the multimodal interventions of the diabetes prevention studies have set the gold standard. Strictly avoiding nutrients rich in those fatty acids (lauristic, myristic, palmitic acid) that increase cholesterol synthesis and reduce hepatic LDL-uptake have proven effective for lowering LDL-cholesterol. Even in clinically overt coronary heart disease, diet, physical activity, and stress management can induce regression of coronary stenoses and reduce angina pectoris. Diet and lifestyle may be employed as a sole preventative measure, but also combined with medication. Recommendations need not only consider the individual risk profile, but also the personal preferences to ensure adequate adherence.",
author = "Birgit-Christiane Zyriax and Eberhard Windler",
note = "CME Fortbildung",
year = "2018",
month = aug,
day = "15",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "43",
pages = "294--309",
journal = "AKTUEL ERNAHRUNGSMED",
issn = "0341-0501",
publisher = "Georg Thieme Verlag KG",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ernährung in der Prävention und Therapie der koronaren Herzkrankheit

AU - Zyriax, Birgit-Christiane

AU - Windler, Eberhard

N1 - CME Fortbildung

PY - 2018/8/15

Y1 - 2018/8/15

N2 - Diet and lifestyle have an important impact on the development of cardiovascular risk factors, the manifestation of coronary heart disease, and the prognosis after a cardiovascular event. Even in the presence of strong genetic predisposition patients benefit from a healthy lifestyle with respect to coronary heart disease. Much of the effectiveness of lifestyle interventions is supposedly due to their broad influence on all major risk factors as there are overweight, central obesity, lipid disorders, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus type 2, but also due to independent mechanisms. A Mediterranean diet has been repeatedly shown to reduce cardiovascular events by exchange of several nutrients among others preferring olive oil or nuts, even without measurable impact on conventional risk factors. A diet rich in fruit, vegetables and low-fat milk products and limited in salt and calories if appropriate is considered evidence-based for reducing elevated blood pressure and prevention of coronary heart disease. In terms of insulin resistance and prevention of type 2 diabetes the multimodal interventions of the diabetes prevention studies have set the gold standard. Strictly avoiding nutrients rich in those fatty acids (lauristic, myristic, palmitic acid) that increase cholesterol synthesis and reduce hepatic LDL-uptake have proven effective for lowering LDL-cholesterol. Even in clinically overt coronary heart disease, diet, physical activity, and stress management can induce regression of coronary stenoses and reduce angina pectoris. Diet and lifestyle may be employed as a sole preventative measure, but also combined with medication. Recommendations need not only consider the individual risk profile, but also the personal preferences to ensure adequate adherence.

AB - Diet and lifestyle have an important impact on the development of cardiovascular risk factors, the manifestation of coronary heart disease, and the prognosis after a cardiovascular event. Even in the presence of strong genetic predisposition patients benefit from a healthy lifestyle with respect to coronary heart disease. Much of the effectiveness of lifestyle interventions is supposedly due to their broad influence on all major risk factors as there are overweight, central obesity, lipid disorders, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus type 2, but also due to independent mechanisms. A Mediterranean diet has been repeatedly shown to reduce cardiovascular events by exchange of several nutrients among others preferring olive oil or nuts, even without measurable impact on conventional risk factors. A diet rich in fruit, vegetables and low-fat milk products and limited in salt and calories if appropriate is considered evidence-based for reducing elevated blood pressure and prevention of coronary heart disease. In terms of insulin resistance and prevention of type 2 diabetes the multimodal interventions of the diabetes prevention studies have set the gold standard. Strictly avoiding nutrients rich in those fatty acids (lauristic, myristic, palmitic acid) that increase cholesterol synthesis and reduce hepatic LDL-uptake have proven effective for lowering LDL-cholesterol. Even in clinically overt coronary heart disease, diet, physical activity, and stress management can induce regression of coronary stenoses and reduce angina pectoris. Diet and lifestyle may be employed as a sole preventative measure, but also combined with medication. Recommendations need not only consider the individual risk profile, but also the personal preferences to ensure adequate adherence.

UR - https://www.thieme-connect.de/products/ejournals/pdf/10.1055/a-0630-2465.pdf

M3 - Andere (Vorworte u.ä.)

VL - 43

SP - 294

EP - 309

JO - AKTUEL ERNAHRUNGSMED

JF - AKTUEL ERNAHRUNGSMED

SN - 0341-0501

IS - 4

ER -