Have A Heart

Meanderer

Supreme Member
I read this about the heart in the February Prevention Magazine, and would like to share it with you. The article is: Big Heart Mistakes You're Making Now, and #5 is: "You treat your heart like a pump". What do you think?


"The whole pump thing is old thinking". says Thomas Cowan, a family physician and the author of The ~our-fold Path to Healing, a holistic guide to health.

"The heart does not pump the blood, ¬it's more like the blood pumps the heart," he says. Here's how it works: When blood moves through veins, it picks up speed as it approaches the heart, the same way rivulets gain momentum as they come together into a larger stream.

"The heart then acts as a dam, holding back the onrush. When enough pressure builds in the heart's chambers, that energy bursts open the gates, or valves.

"The heart doesn't contract as much as it collapses into itself when the blood rushes out," Cowan says. Thinking of the heart as a muscular dam that syncs the functions of all the other organs, Cowan says, gives you a more accurate rationale for both regular exercise (which encourages your heart and whole body into a healthy, consistent rhythm) and eating healthy fats (which releases water into your blood for more rushing action). Cool, huh"?
 

I find this description in Prevention hard to accept. If the heart isn't pumping the blood then what is causing the blood to move?

I agree... It's nonsense. The heart is a pump made up of cardiac muscle... one of the three muscle types in the body... smooth, cardiac and somatic. And yes the heart very much contracts during systole and relaxes during diastole

Every single heart muscle cell is capable of generating an impulse to contract. It's called excitability. Normally the contraction impulse starts at the top of the right atria in an area called the sinus node... down to the AV node which is at the juncture between the right atria and the right ventricle.. then down through the left and right bundle of HIS.. to the purkinji fibers and the entire organ contracts in this manor.. forcing blood through the right chambers, the lungs.. the left atria and finally the left ventricle where it travels through the aorta out to the rest of the body. It returns to the heart via the inferior vena cava. If that aint a pump... what is? lol!!

Why would this person who CLAIMS to be a doctor write something as foolish as this? He's got to be selling something..
 
I do recall seeing a film of two individuals heart cells. Each was pulsing at its own rate, and when they were joined together, they're pulsing became synchronized and they beat as one.
 
Your thread really interested me Meanderer;) I have some heart problems, so naturally, I wanted to read it. My cardios have explained that the one issue I have with my heart is the "electrical", and of course they used that to help me understand it I suppose. I'm going back to read the link, more info, but the thing that came to mind was that I have a 3rd degree AV Node block, which again, is what they called "the electrical" part of my heart isn't working right. So, a pacemaker was implanted. I kicks in when my natural "pacemaker" doesn't. This makes me wonder if your guy isn't right. Anyway, I'll go read and see what I come up with;)
 
Hearts are all over Hallmarks Valentines Day cards. Just sayin.
Yeah John, they found out cards with brains on just do not sell as well!:)....although you may be right.
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Ok, I read it, and it is truly a lot to think about. I can't agree more about eating "good" fats (oils etc) and good carbs (fruits, whole grains, dairy) and water. Water is at the top of my list every day. But instead of me trying to understand it all, I'll just keep doing what I do, and that is exercise, eat right, and drink lots of water.

Thank you for the read, I think there are tons of "old ideas" out there, as well as in my brain, so I am open-minded when it comes to different information;) Denise
 
I just had my blood pressure taken at the hospital a few days ago it was 120/80 which apparently is very good..

Holly, mine was close, 118/80 I think, I can look at my med records online and see. That's one thing I'm so thankful for, no BP problems, good for you too girlfriend!!
 
Medical science is debated among the professionals. I need not engage in theory with no more knowledge than this ole man has so I reckon I'll sit this one out!
 

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