Stress and Heart Disease: Par... Video Transcript

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Stress and Heart Disease: Part 1
Staying Healthy Through Stress Reduction
Nutritional Supplements: Can They Help With Heart Disease?
Men's Hearts, Women's Hearts: How Are They Different?
Can Cardiovascular Disease be Prevented?
Sleep and Heart Disease: What's the Link?
Heart Disease Facts: What Every Woman Should Know
Say ALOHA to Heart Disease
Diagnosing Heart Problems
What Should Women Know About Heart Disease?
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Stress and Heart Disease: Part 2
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Participants

, Sam Benjamin MD, Lisa Clark , Nate Lebowitz MD, Michael Eckstein MD

Summary

We've all experienced stress at one time or another. Your heart rate goes up, your blood pressure rises, and every part of your body tenses up. It has been linked to a variety of health conditions, but one of the most significant effects is the damage it can do to your heart. Not only is stress dangerous for people with heart disease, it can also increase the risk of heart complications. Join our panel of experts as they discuss the relationship between stress and heart disease, and share some helpful stress reduction techniques.

Webcast Transcript

LISA CLARK: I'm Lisa Clark. Welcome, and thank you for joining us for this webcast. If you are one of the millions of Americans diagnosed with heart disease, you can turn to your doctors for help, change your diet to help, and take prescription drugs or nutritional supplements to help. But there's one more weapon in your arsenal against heart disease, and it's all in your mind. Learning how to recognize and reduce stress is an important tool in reducing your risk of heart disease. For the next few moments, we'll discuss ways to help you do just that.

Joining us for this discussion, Nate Lebowitz, a cardiologist and assistant clinical professor at New York Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. Welcome, Nate. Also joining us, Sam Benjamin. He's the director for the Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine at State University of New York, Stony Brook. He is also one of the founders of Mariposa, which is a natural supplement company. Thank you, Sam, for joining us.

LISA CLARK: Let me ask you, I won't mention any names. But I happen to know someone, Type-A personality, has had some heart issues. And when you mention things like meditation or writing a journal or massage: "Not me. I couldn't possibly." How do you encourage your cardiac patients to have an open mind about the role that their minds can play in helping them get well?

NATE LEBOWITZ, MD: I think like in a number of disease states and lifestyle changes, they've studied different interactions to achieve that change. And in study after study, smoking cessation and other things, the number one modality that comes out as effective is a conversation between the physician and the patient. As long as it is a trusted relationship, and perhaps a long-term relationship. But a one-on-one relationship where you're not talking down to the patient, saying: These things work. There's science behind it. I want you to just try it.

LISA CLARK: I want to ask you a little bit about some of the things that are mentioned. Meditation is one. Journal-writing. Guided visual imagery.

SAM BENJAMIN, MD: Guided visual imagery, probably its greatest proponents are Dr. Martin Rossman and Gene Octaberg out in California. It's just another way of approaching this. It's through instruction, usually a certified instruction, and summoning up other images that might represent the disease.

I had a patient who had a problem. They were diabetic with heart disease, they had chest pain. They were being treated very appropriately, yet they continued to be symptomatic. And they imaged the fact that the heart disease and diabetes were, for them, like a ball and chain around their chest. And when they imaged that, and began to unravel the ball and chain, their symptoms got substantially better, while physiologically there was some sign of improvement, and a decreased need for drugs.

LISA CLARK: Aromatherapy was also mentioned. I think that's very intriguing.

SAM BENJAMIN, MD: Memories of smells can oftentimes summon up certain immunologic responses in the body, as well as relaxation states.

LISA CLARK: One of the most interesting mind/body approaches in this realm has to do with prayer. And it's not necessarily the patient who needs to do the praying, but there have been some studies done about people who are prayed for, and perhaps they don't even realize they're being prayed for. Tell me a little bit about that.

NATE LEBOWITZ, MD: It's called intercessory prayer.

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