June Is Alzheimer and Brain Awareness Month

June is the Alzheimer and brain health awareness month.
I know, you’re on Cuisine by Celine’s blog…where we get the right nutrition along with great flavors!
The Alzheimer association is telling us that the risks of developing Alzheimer or heart related dementia are greater if you have diabetes, cholesterol or high blood pressure… Now we’re getting closer to the food field.
Diabetes, cholesterol and high blood pressure are conditions that make it harder for your heart to pump the blood, and the oxygen and fuel it carries, to the brain.
So food is not everything but we can see how it makes sense to get a healthy diet that will help maintaining good organs.
→→ →→
The Alzheimer association recommends to adopt a long term heart healthy lifestyle : beside non smoking and exercise, lower fat and cholesterol intake and favor unsaturated fats.
“be heart smart” Remember, what’s good for your heart is good for your head
Some of the strongest evidence about maintaining your brain links brain health to heart health. Even though you can’t feel your brain working, it’s one of the most active organs in your body. Your heart pumps about 20 percent of your blood to your brain, where billions of cells use about 20 percent of the blood’s oxygen and fuel.
If your heart isn’t pumping well — or if your brain’s blood vessels are damaged — your brain cells have trouble getting all the food and oxygen they need. Any condition that damages your heart or blood vessels can affect your brain’s blood supply.
How you can take brain health to heart:
• Adopt a long-term, heart-healthy “food lifestyle” rather than a short-term diet and eat in moderation. A long-term study of 1,500 adults found that those who were obese in middle age were twice as likely to develop dementia in later life. Those who also had high cholesterol and high blood pressure had six times the risk of dementia.
• Reduce your intake of fat and cholesterol.Studies have shown that high intake of saturated fat and cholesterol clogs the arteries and is associated with higher risk for Alzheimer’s disease. Use mono- and polyunsaturated fats, such as olive oil, for example. Try baking or grilling food instead of frying.
• Exercise. Walking or other moderate exercise for 30 minutes each day gets the body moving and the heart pumping.
• Don’t smoke.Smoking interferes with blood flow and oxygen to the brain and is a major risk factor for heart disease and stroke.
Manage your numbers. Controlling your body weight, blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar helps reduce your risk of heart disease and stroke.
“adopt a brain health diet”
The word diet can feel annoying at times, so let's say that a balanced life style will help every areas: weight, heart, numbers, mood and brain.
A balanced life style makes a happy, healthy, longer life!
Let's do this, one step at a time!





