Since hardening of the arteries is a hereditary factor (big time) is a concern of mine. Two stents in my body now due to it. I do eat eggs more than the right greens because of dentures and bits getting under the plates. I see the doc in 2 weeks and he will want to wait for lab tests I am sure to check my numbers. I only take One prescription at a low dose, so messing up that is not an issue.
Thank you for all the research results, I had read pretty much all of those but others may have needed to see them too.
Each case is different and not a stone cold best route for all, so waiting 2 weeks for the doctor shouldn't hurt that much.
He may not be aware I am not eating leafy greens as much as I had been.
Hello IrishEyes, I fed your above info to AI and its reply was too lengthy, so I had to edit a lot of it out. Also, please excuse AI's gender mix-up.
1. “Hardening of the arteries is a hereditary factor (big time).”
Partly true.
Atherosclerosis (hardening/narrowing of the arteries) has a genetic component, but lifestyle factors (diet, smoking, exercise, blood pressure, diabetes control) play an equal or greater role for most people. Family history of premature heart disease does increase risk, but it doesn’t mean it’s inevitable. Many people with a family history avoid serious problems by managing their lifestyle and risk factors.
3. “I do eat eggs more than the right greens because of dentures.”
Neutral, but worth clarifying.
Eggs are not the heart-villain they were once thought to be. For most people, moderate egg consumption (up to 1 per day) is not strongly linked with heart disease risk. The bigger concern is missing out on greens—leafy vegetables provide fiber, potassium, folate, antioxidants, and vitamin K, all of which support vascular health. Dentures can indeed make chewing greens hard, but blending, chopping finely, or cooking them soft are alternatives.
4. “Each case is different and not a stone cold best route for all.”
True.
Cardiovascular health depends on many variables: cholesterol subtypes, inflammation, blood sugar, blood pressure, genetics, lifestyle. Doctors individualize treatment plans for a reason.
6. “He may not be aware I am not eating leafy greens as much.”
Important point.
That’s worth telling his doctor. Low greens → less vitamin K and potassium → can influence blood pressure, vascular function, and clotting balance. If he’s on blood thinners, greens also affect dosing. Doctors need to know changes in diet to interpret lab results correctly.
Bottom line:
IrishEyes is partly right. Genetics matter “big time,” but lifestyle plays a huge role too. Eggs aren’t a major problem for most people, but not eating leafy greens could mean missing key heart-protective nutrients. And yes—waiting two weeks is usually fine if no urgent symptoms appear, but he should absolutely update his doctor about his diet changes."