Close
relationships and a sense of community are essential not just for emotional
and mental well-being, but also for physical health. Heart disease
remains our #1 killer. Increasing evidence shows that "opening the
heart" emotionally also opens and heals our physical hearts. This
is the focus of cardiologist Dean Ornish in his latest book: "Love
and Survival: The Scientific Basis for the Healing Power of Intimacy."
If you're not already familiar with Dr. Ornish's work, please pay close
attention--this is important stuff.
The
heart's rhythms provide the background music for our lives. With
each "beat" the heart's muscular walls contract, pumping fresh blood to
the entire body while simultaneously cycling blood to the lungs for renewal
with oxygen. With each relaxation, the heart fills with blood for
the next beat. Hard working cardiac muscle needs lots of oxygen and
nutrients, but is not nourished by blood passing through the heart's chambers.
Instead, the heart "feeds itself" by pumping blood through the famous "coronary"
arteries and their branches, which descend over the outside surface of
the heart. If these arteries become clogged with gunk ("atherosclerotic
plaque") the heart muscle downstream is deprived of oxygen, which can cause
the chest pains known as "angina." If the oxygen deprivation is severe
enough, it can trigger a heart attack.
When
we speak of "heart disease," we usually refer to the clogging of the coronary
arteries. (Clogged arteries in the brain can lead to a "stroke.")
In the past, it had been thought that heart disease couldn't improve--that
at best it would not get worse. Dr. Ornish questioned this assumption,
and in the late 1980s conducted a study on whether "comprehensive lifestyle
changes" could reduce coronary artery plaque and thereby increase blood
flow to the heart muscle. The results of this research are revolutionary,
if only we will heed them.
The
patients in the study all started with severe coronary heart disease and
were randomly divided into two groups: the "control" group received
standard medical advice and treatment, while the "experimental" group made
major lifestyle changes, including a very low-fat, whole foods diet,
stress reduction with slow stretching exercises and meditation, moderate
exercise (walking), and participation in regular groups focusing on communication,
opening up with feelings, compassion, and group support. All participants
had cardiac tests both before and after the year-long study. Most
of the control group became measurably worse, while those making the major
changes showed reduction in their arterial blockages, had much less
angina pain, had in many cases decreased or stopped blood-pressure medicines,
and felt better overall. Ornish published a popular guide
for heart health in 1990 with his "Program for Reversing Heart Disease."
He recently published a follow-up study showing that people who maintain
these lifestyle patterns show continuing reversal of heart disease over
time.
The
lifestyle changes were not separated out, so it wasn't known (for example)
whether diet or group support made "more" difference. But it was
definitely shown that we can reverse heart disease. Ornish
notes that sweeping lifestyle changes are often actually easier
to make than small changes, because with the big changes people feel better
pretty quickly, and this provides motivation to continue.
Interest
has steadily grown, and now over forty major insurance companies cover
participation in Ornish's program, which can often be an alternative to
cardiac bypass surgery. As the medical system begins collapsing
under its own weight, we must increasingly apply the old adage "an ounce
of prevention is worth a pound of cure."
The
specifics of the program make sense. It certainly isn't farfetched
to suppose that diet profoundly affects our health. Ornish's recipes
taste fantastic, but are sometimes a bit complex. Many wonderful
and easy recipes can be found in the books of John McDougall, MD, who recommends
a similar diet.
"Moderate
exercise" can be as simple as walking a half-hour a day. Those with
existing heart disease or other health problems should start slowly and
may need an individualized program. Ornish discusses studies showing
that we get the health benefits of exercise by going from the "no
exercise" to the "moderate exercise" group. Athletes may be more
"physically fit," but they aren't necessarily healthier.
Slow
stretching exercises such as yoga release tensions from the body and mind,
nourish the cartilage covering the bone in all our joints, and are often
nearly magic in preventing the "aches and pains" that many accept as inevitable.
Meditation focuses and calms the mind, and is compatible with any religious
beliefs or with no religious belief.
Of all
the aspects of the program, however, Ornish himself seems most excited
by the power of "opening your heart" to your own feelings, to others, and
to a larger whole. He cites research showing that "people who feel
lonely, depressed, and isolated have three to five times the rate of premature
death and disease from virtually all causes when compared to those who
have a sense of love and connection and community in their lives."
A study at Stanford University randomly divided women with metastatic breast
cancer into two groups. The groups got similar medical treatment,
but the women in the experimental group also met together once a week for
mutual support. "Five years later," says Ornish in an interview,
"it turned out that the women in the support group lived twice as long.
I
almost fell off my chair when I saw those data."
"Support
groups" may not always be the answer; the main point is that anything we
do to deepen our connections with others and increase our sense of community
will also improve our health. When we "open our hearts" mentally,
emotionally, and spiritually, we literally open our physical hearts as
well, and this is an incredible gift we can give both ourselves and those
around us.