Get the Most from Your Doctor – Know Your Numbers Part Two:

February 21, 2013 in Healthy Living, Nutrition & Diets

With the average doctor’s visit lasting only about seven minutes, it’s crucial that you go in armed with information and questions vital to your health.

What specific things do you need to know for optimal health?

If you don’t know what to ask for, you might miss the opportunity to get the information you need from your doctor. It’s left to you to educate yourself and your family, and I’m here to help.

Know your numbers – it’s crucial!

This is the second of my six part series on Getting the Most from your Doctor. In part one of this series, I talked about optimal blood pressure and gave you some tips on how to decrease your blood pressure.

In this second installment, I’ll share with you the numbers you want to know and the questions you want to ask your doctor about inflammation and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP).

Inflammation and hs-CRP

Hs-CRP is a marker for inflammation around the heart. This marker has been shown to be an independent risk factor for heart disease – just like cholesterol is. But many doctors don’t check this number. And it is such an important number to know when looking at your risk for heart disease.

In addition, ANY inflammation in your body will increase the risk of getting every disease under the sun. Even Alzheimer’s disease and cancer. So you want to make sure that your hs-CRP, your inflammation level, is low.

How to Decrease Inflammation

When testing for hs-CRP, between 1-3 mg/L is considered average. But we want our hs-CRP to be less than 1 mg/L, because that is really considered optimal.

So what do you do to have a lower hs-CRP? What do you do to lower your levels of inflammation around the heart?

Fish oil, with its omega-3 fatty acids – especially EPA – is a great option. EPA is a really effective natural anti-inflammatory. You can get these omega-3s by eating foods like salmon, walnuts, avocados, etc…, but to get high enough levels of EPA to lower inflammation, you may really want to take fish oil supplements.

Fish oils are a great way to decrease your inflammation. And it’s important to take a pharmaceutical grade fish oil supplement, because low quality fish oil supplements can be contaminated with toxins, mercury, and PCBs.

Eat Clean to lower your Inflammation

You can also lower your inflammation by exercising and eating a clean diet. Eating clean means eating foods that come from nature (in their natural forms as much as possible), and staying away from processed foods.

Fish oil, exercise, and a clean diet are an important part of any healthy lifestyle, but are especially crucial when dealing with an elevated hs-CRP. Know your numbers – have your doctor check your hs-CRP, and if it’s elevated, take steps to decrease your inflammation.

I’d love to hear your feedback. Let me know if you find this article helpful.  Leave your comments below or on my Facebook page.  Be sure to let me know what other topics you want to hear about!  Thanks

Wishing you the best of great health, great happiness and, of course, great sex.

Dr. Jen, Sexpert MD

 

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food allergies and weight gainWhen you consume an unhealthy diet, toxins enter the body and over time cause damage. Days, weeks, months and years of eating toxic foods can cause the damage to become severe, destroying your intestinal lining and causing leaky gut, which leaves you susceptible to dangerous inflammation, unwanted fat-storage and disease, including diabetes, heart disease, obesity and autoimmune disorders.

Read more: Are Food Sensitivities Causing Your Weight Loss Woes?

Dr. Jen Chats with HealthTalk’s Dr. Manny about Fibromyalgia

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Fibromyalgia (FM) is a mysterious disorder, the underlying causes of which are not very clearly understood. Unfortunately, it is quite common, especially among women aged 20 to 50. Individuals affected by the disease experience long-term, widespread pain and tenderness in the joints, muscles, tendons and other soft tissues.

The condition has been extensively studied by experts across the globe for decades – many theories have been formulated, only to be refuted years later. Diagnosis is a result of exclusion, rather than defining pathophysiological characteristics.

Read more or watch video: What you need to know about fibromyalgia

 

 

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