Health News

Why Heart Disease is No Longer a Death Sentence



Deaths from heart failure have fallen by half in the last 20 years and doctors are stunned by how long people are surviving with heart disease. Yet millions are still at risk from a deadly “blackout” of their body’s cells few doctors know how to check for and their medications are unable to stop.

Ricky Hurst, a former ranger and school football coach from Jackson, Michigan, was told that his heart disease was terminal and there was nothing doctors could do. He was advised to get his affairs in order, to say his prayers and to be ready for the final curtain.

Ricky took his doctor’s advice. He spoke to his pastor, made his peace with God and his family gathered to say their final goodbyes.

Yet a year later, Ricky has confounded his doctors’ predictions. He’s still alive and is just one of many people who refuse to succumb to America’s most lethal disease for decades longer than anyone expected.

1 in 10 Now Live with Heart Disease for Over a Decade

Heart disease used to be a death sentence. A silent “widow maker” heart attack risked claiming your life at any second, and there was little doctors could do to stop it. But new medications are enabling people to survive for longer with heart disease. Rather than go from diagnosis to death within a few months, people are living with the disease for years, or even decades.

According to research published in the Circulation Research journal, half of people diagnosed with heart failure live for at least five years, and 1 in 10 survive for at least 10 years.

>>>How to Protect Yourself from a “Blackout” of Your Body’s Cells that Risks Stopping Your Heart from Beating

"Modern pharmacological and device therapy is very effective, and we are now fairly commonly seeing patients with substantial or even complete recovery of their heart muscle dysfunction." - Dr. John McMurray, a professor of cardiology with the University of Glasgow in Scotland

Living Longer But at What Price?

While it’s good news that people are living longer, their quality of life is far from how they’d imagined spending their senior years.

Heart failure is a chronic, progressive condition. It gets worse over time. There’s little doctors can do to make it better other than prescribe medications to “manage” the symptoms and to slow down the body’s deterioration.

And this is exactly what they’re doing, in ever higher quantities like they’re candy.

Chief among them are angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACE inhibitors), angiotensin receptor blockers, beta blockers, and aldosterone blockers.

While these drugs are effective at prolonging people’s lives, they do little to relieve the weakness, wheezing low energy, concentration problems and dizzy spells that heart disease causes.

Prescription medications can even add to these unpleasant symptoms with side effects like:

  • Dry hacking cough to clear blood from the lungs
  • Increased blood-potassium level, risking hyperkalemia
  • Chronic fatigue, so all they can do is spend days in their chair
  • Painful headaches that make it difficult to work, sleep or think
  • Loss of taste and feeling sick after a big meal
  • Birth defects

With so many side effects, you have to question whether mainstream medicine’s approach of “managing” the symptoms rather than addressing the underlying cause is the best solution

Manage the symptoms, or treat the underlying cause?

The focus on managing symptoms rather than treating the causes of heart disease is like being asked to walk with a painful stone in your shoe.

Rather than stop to remove the stone, mainstream medicine wants you to keep walking and take drugs to numb the pain instead. But the longer the stone is in your shoe, the more damage it does to your foot until the pain gets so bad there’s nothing the drugs can do to mask it.

If you’re overweight or already been diagnosed with heart disease, surely a better solution - than relying on drugs - is to take steps to remedy the underlying causes? Thankfully, such a solution has been discovered.

How to Protect Yourself from a “Blackout” of Your Body’s Cells that Risks Stopping Your Heart from Beating

In a special presentation, natural health researcher Adam Glass reveals how big pharma is purposely keeping you in the dark about how to protect yourself from a “blackout” of your body’s cells.

This “blackout”, where the energy disappears from your cells like switching off a light, is now being blamed for causing the rampant rise in heart disease.

In the video, Glass also reveals:

  • The #1 warning sign of a "widow maker" heart attack, the most violent kind thats comes with no warning, no symptoms and can cause sudden death
  • The one nutrient that pharma giants tried to hide that holds the key to slashing heart attacks strokes and hypertension without drugs or side effects and can lower your blood pressure from a lethal 200/100 to a safe 115/75.
  • The shameful truth of cholesterol lowering meds the drug companies pray you never hear about
  • The world's #1 food to fight against heart attacks
  • Why lowering cholesterol is a waste of time (and why the statins industry could be the scam of the century)
  • Why you should avoid so called "heart healthy" foods like the plaque

If you or anyone you know is taking cholesterol lowering medication, is overweight or may be at risk of a heart attack, share this presentation with them. It may save their life.

>>>Watch the presentation to discover the surprising reason Japanese men have fewer heart attacks

P.S. People may be living longer with heart disease but they do so with worsening ill health that robs them of their pleasure of living. Prescribing more and more drugs clearly isn’t working. This is why the solution revealed in the video is so revolutionary. It tackles the root cause of heart disease in an entirely new way that could save millions of lives. This solution is unusual and may offend some people. So make sure you watch the presentation with an open mind.

References:

  1. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/06/health/heart-failure-hospice.html?_r=0
  2. https://www.webmd.com/heart-disease/heart-failure/news/20170706/heart-failure-patients-living-longer#1
  3. https://www.everydayhealth.com/heart-failure/living-with/congestive-heart-failure-life-expectancy/
  4. https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/high-blood-pressure/in-depth/ace-inhibitors/art-20047480?pg=2