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Showing posts with the label Exercise for Cholesterol

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The Hidden Dangers of Dehydration: What You Need to Know

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Introduction Why Dehydration Is a Silent but Serious Health Risk Dehydration is one of the most underestimated yet clinically significant physiological disturbances affecting individuals across all age groups. Despite its seemingly simple definition—loss of body fluids exceeding intake—it has far-reaching implications on cellular function, organ systems, and overall health outcomes. In both community and clinical settings, dehydration contributes significantly to morbidity, especially among vulnerable populations such as children, older adults, and individuals with chronic illnesses. Table of Contents Introduction Understanding Dehydration Common Causes Risk Factors Signs and Symptoms Prevention Strategies Hydration Techniques Treatment and ORS Clinical Diagnosis Complications Long-Term Hydration Conclusion At its core, dehydration disrupts the delicate balance of water and electrolytes necessary for normal physiological processes. Water constitutes a subs...

12 Lifestyle Changes to Lower Cholesterol Naturally

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By VitalWell Hub | August 2025 Executive summary (short): Elevated low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol is a major modifiable risk factor for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Comprehensive lifestyle modification—targeting diet, physical activity, weight management, tobacco cessation, alcohol moderation, sleep, stress, and selected supplements—can substantially reduce LDL cholesterol and other cardiometabolic risks. This article provides an evidence-based, clinically oriented, stepwise program you can apply or adapt in clinical practice or personal health planning. Introduction: Why lifestyle matters for cholesterol Cholesterol is a lipid essential to cell membranes, steroid hormone synthesis, and bile formation. However, when circulating concentrations of LDL cholesterol are elevated, cholesterol becomes a driver of atherosclerotic plaque formation and cardiovascular events. Population studies and randomized trials have esta...