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Posts with tag heart rate

Eating fish slows your heart rate

Other than potentially high mercury levels, there doesn't seem to be anything bad about eating fish. A study coming out of France recently has found that regular fish in the diet not only raises Omega-3 fatty acid levels, raises good HDL cholesterol levels, and lowers blood pressure, but it also slows down the heart rate. And the more fish a person eats the slower the heart goes (in a healthy way, not to the point of going too slow or stopping).

I really wish mercury weren't such an issue, because it sounds like fish really is a wonder food. Do you think we'll start hearing bad news soon? It seems like that's always the way it goes!

Should you invest in a heart rate monitor?

When you're working out, do you ever notice those hard-core gym fanatics seem to all have heart-rate monitors on? No? Maybe it's just my gym. But I see them so much that I've started to wonder whether I need one.

Heart rate monitors aren't a bad investment, but as fitsugar points out, they're usually more for keeping track of your workout than your heart. You know those heart-rate charts they have all over the gym? Well, in a nutshell, they're telling you what your heart rate should be at depending on what you're aiming for. For cardio-vascular conditioning, your heart-rate should be a bit higher than if, say, you're trying to burn fat. So the heart rate monitor helps you monitor that, and it's a heck of a lot easier than trying to count your pulse while your running on the treadmill.

I don't think I'll be buying one anytime soon, since all the machines seem to have one anyway. What about you?

The enzyme that slows a racing heart, naturally

It seems like pacemakers and other implanted devices like ICD's have been in the news a lot lately, for different reasons. Here is some good news that is somewhat related, and may mean that in the future some people will get to avoid surgery: scientists have discovered an enzyme that works to put the brakes on a racing heartbeat. A person's heart rate is set by a single cell within the heart, called the pacemaker cell, and a naturally occurring enzyme called Pak 1 has been found to interact specifically with that cell -- telling it to slow things down.

This discovery will obviously have a potentially huge effect on treatments, drugs, and the lives of people living with heart disease.

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