Thursday, February 9, 2012

The Miracle Heart : The Ultimate Guide to Preventing and Curing Heart Disease With Diet and Supplements

Thursday, February 4, 2010, 2:38
This news item was posted in Diet Nutrition category and has 4 Comments so far.

Product Description
You Can Stop Heart Disease–While heredity plays a great role in a person’s disposition to heart disease, biology can be overcome with the right foods and dietary supplements. USA WeekendNew York Times bestselling author Jean Carper–America’s most trusted source of cutting edge nutritional advice–now provides all the information you ned to lower the risk of heart disease and its debilitating consequences. The Miracle Heartreveals the most current findings availabl… More >>

The Miracle Heart : The Ultimate Guide to Preventing and Curing Heart Disease With Diet and Supplements

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4 Responses to “The Miracle Heart : The Ultimate Guide to Preventing and Curing Heart Disease With Diet and Supplements”

  1. P. Langenfeld said on Thursday, February 4, 2010, 3:47

    I have read more than a half dozen books on reversing or preventing heart disease and this is one of my favorites. Don’t let the low price or original publication date throw you. Everything I read is mirrored in other more recent books and the author throws in some additional insights of her own.

    I am a health care professional, and I ordered two dozen of these books and loan them out to patients and have had nothing but complements.

    Other highly recommended books include my favorite ‘Track Your Plaque, and any of Joel Fuhrman’s Books. See a more complete review of mine of many of the books under a book called ‘The Cure for Heart Disease’.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  2. J Davies said on Thursday, February 4, 2010, 5:56

    I understand the points of the previous reviewer. As a journalist, Carper might have included information from the studies he/she is referring to. However, I believe that those who are buying books like Miracle Heart are because they are already monitoring their diet and exercise to keep their hearts healthy. Supplements do just that: supplement what we are already doing. Co-Q10, ALA, HGH etc are not to replace choosing to exercise to eat a healthy diet. I took Carper’s information as a means to supplement what I am already doing. My parents are taking Co-Q10 as part of their array of supplements and are feeling healthier. They get their supplements from a site called PapaNature because it offers documentation, a variety of brands and door to door service.
    Rating: 4 / 5

  3. P. N. Payne said on Thursday, February 4, 2010, 7:15

    It’s hard to imagine finding more value for a few bucks than Jean Carper’s various books, including ‘Miracle Heart’. So I’ve given a couple dozen of these to friends, relatives, and employees. Because of this book, my wife & I have been on about 5 grams of citrus pectin per day (chapter 12) for a year and a half plus other recommendations longer. My dad & brother already have stents, and my wife’s mother died of complications from strokes. We recently had our hearts scanned for hard plaque and both came up totally clean. Co-incidence?

    Jean Carper’s style is to usually cover one subject per chapter and reference the original research sources. Although I might like it a little more brief, I think she says enough to cover the subject without being too verbose. She covers a few or several subjects, puts a cover on it and goes to print.

    We have serveral Carper books as well as another 50 health books. I think Jean Carper is one of the best sources in our library. Is this book perfect? Absolutely Not. Is it Outstanding? Absolutely Yes. Read it for what is there, not for what is not there.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  4. fblaw6 said on Thursday, February 4, 2010, 8:00

    This book summarizes much of the latest research on prevention of cardiovascular related diseases. The author covers almost all (forgot, e.g. “melatonin”) of the bases in relating the latest developments in diet related heart disease prevention, and as such I found it an excellent informative book. The author reports the studies, the results, the recommendations and the dosages relating to supplementation of vitamins, minerals, some herbal products, omega 3, etc. etc. The book contains new information that I believe has yet to be widely disemminated.. I discern the same weakness in this book as in much of the current information on diet, to wit, how to combine all into a single plan of treatment. The author might have reported to us that studies have yet to be done on how these divergent benefits of supplements can be advantageously and safely combined, but instead omitted any such discussion. Additionally, and I note this as another suspected weakness in my mind of the medical work currently being done on diet, it seems that all of the information is coming out of what I consider to be highly suspicious “population” studies, as opposed to research on individuals( or monkees) on the chemical effects on a single individual of supplementation. If I am going to take 1000 grams of vitamin C per day, I would like to know the immediate and long term chemical effect, as opposed to knowing that 6000 people lowered their risk of heart attack by 19% by so taking. And, then, immediately after reading the book, what do we get but one study concluding that excess C contributes to, rather than prevents, the problem. But as an educational tool this is a very fine effort!
    Rating: 4 / 5

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