Posted By Nancy on July 14, 1999 at 09:51:48
Recently when I had my
HolterHolter monitor (24h) monitor results read, which turned out to be OK, thank goodness, the cardiologist raised some concern about my BP which was 140/100. It has never been 100 before-last year it was 90. He said to
cutCuts and puncture wounds out salting my food for now. I'm obese and he said before I begin strenuous exercise, he wants me to do a cardiolite stress test.
Now, I did not ask him what level of
sodiumSodium ascorbate
Sodium bicarbonate
Sodium bicarbonate-omeprazole
Sodium biphosphate-sodium phosphate
Sodium chloride
Sodium chloride irrigation
Sodium chloride, bacteriostatic
Sodium chloride, inhalation
Sodium chloride, injectable
Sodium citrate-citric acid
Sodium fluoride I should aim for. Can you give me some guidelines? The problem is, I don't salt my food or salt when I cook. I've had the same box of salt in the cupboard for 2 years, so not salting my food won't help me. However, my Mom had high BP and told me to also check labels. I know alot of the quicky soup mixes (Cup of Soup, etc) have at least 600 mg of salt each and I eat those quite a bit.
Once I know the level to aim for, I can plan accordingly. I've read people like Dr. Ornish drop their folks to 2 to 5
gramsGram stain of skin lesion
Gram stain of tissue biopsy per day, is that necessary? I assume that's eating just fresh fruit and veggies. Thanks for your input.
2 gms a day is difficult but can be done for people with severe heart conditions. For someone just starting to control their salt I would recommend less than 5 gms with the aim to less than 3-4 gms. Weight loss and exercise will also help tremendously. Really work on this because the benefits are well worth it.
I hope you find this information useful. Information provided in the heart forum is for general purposes only. Only your physician can provide specific diagnoses and therapies. Please feel free to write back with additional questions.
If you would like to make an appointment at the Cleveland Clinic Heart Center, please call 1-800-CCF-CARE or inquire online by using the Heart Center website at www.ccf.org/heartcenter. The Heart Center website contains a directory of the cardiology staff that can be used to select the physician best suited to address your cardiac problem.
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