Healthy California
Are you ready to take control of your health and create lasting, positive change? This podcast dives deep into the root causes of poor health and explores simple, practical steps to improve your well-being from every angle.
To achieve true health, we need balance in all areas of life, including:
✅ Physical health – Nutrition, movement, and disease prevention
✅ Mental health – Managing stress, mindset, and emotional well-being
✅ Environmental health – How our surroundings impact our health
✅ Financial health – Money habits that support a stress-free life
✅ Social health – Building strong, supportive relationships
✅ Spiritual health – Finding purpose, connection, and inner peace
Each episode will provide insightful discussions, expert interviews, and actionable tips to help you live a healthier, more fulfilling life.
🎧 Tune in, take control, and start your journey to total wellness today!
Healthy California
Eating Today to Prevent Heart Disease Tomorrow
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In Episode 37 of Healthy California, we dive deep into one of the most urgent and preventable health issues in the United States: cardiovascular disease. With nearly one million heart-related deaths each year, we break down why heart disease remains the leading cause of death despite access to advanced healthcare, and why lifestyle choices matter more than most people realize.
This episode explains what cardiovascular disease really is, covering coronary heart disease, stroke, hypertension, and heart failure, and explores how inflammation, metabolic dysfunction, insulin resistance, poor diet quality, inactivity, stress, and sleep deprivation all contribute. We challenge outdated cholesterol myths and explain why triglycerides, HDL, LDL particle size, and inflammation matter far more than total cholesterol alone.
From a functional nutrition perspective, we outline practical, actionable strategies to protect your heart, including prioritizing whole foods, reducing sugar and ultra-processed foods, choosing high-quality protein and healthy fats, increasing fiber, supporting metabolic health, and moving your body consistently. We emphasize that prevention, not medication or surgery, is the most powerful tool we have.
The episode closes with encouragement rooted in faith, reminding listeners that true health begins with being in right relationship with God and making daily choices that honor both body and spirit.
Thank you for listening to Healthy California.
If you have tried all my suggestions and are still having trouble with your health, and would like an appointment with me, please email me, text, or call me via the contact information below.
My contact:
Linda Brown, MPT, Doctoral Candidate Functional Nutrition
916-426-2543
linda@heal-throughfood.com
Okay, welcome back and thank you for joining me today.
I'm Linda Brown, your functional nutritionist and physical therapist here in California.
As you know, I believe deeply in the power of food and movement to change lives.
I'm a physical therapist and a functional nutritionist, so I really deeply believe in this.
Almost a million people in 2023.
And the numbers have improved slightly, but the burden remains enormous.
And this is in a country that has like the best health care, right?
A large portion of cardiovascular disease is preventable.
And nutrition and lifestyle play a central role.
What is cardiovascular disease?
All those fall under cardiovascular disease.
You know, we need vessels to keep that muscle alive.
The vessels bring blood, which bring nutrient and oxygen, so the heart needs its own blood supply.
Coronary heart disease is part of cardiovascular disease.
Hypertension is typically the vessels that are in the body, not necessarily in the heart.
And then, of course, you have heart failure.
So cardiovascular disease is an umbrella term that includes all those.
Coronary heart disease is the most common form, causing almost 350,000 U.S. deaths.
This was back in 2023, and this was a statistic by the American Heart Association or the CDC.
I think they had similar stats.
Cardiovascular disease develops when inflammation makes blood vessels more reactive.
It makes them stiff and more prone to plaque buildup.
So over time, this can lead to heart attacks, strokes, and chronic heart failure.
I think you've heard me say multiple times that inflammation is the cause of all, if not most
chronic diseases, and cardiovascular disease is one of those.
It can all cause inflammation.
I go into everything that causes inflammation.
Another contributor to cardiovascular disease is metabolic dysfunction.
LDL is our unhealthy cholesterol, but really we have to pay attention to that.
We'll talk about that a little bit later, because it's not just having high cholesterol.
Another thing is mitochondrial dysfunction.
That means that mitochondria makes energy for every cell in our body.
When that's not working properly, the whole body's not working properly.
So it's multifactorial and it's never just one thing.
Let's go over each one specifically, the causes of cardiovascular disease.
I'm going to read the major ones and then I'll go back through them individually.
So let's go back through each one of those separately.
And let's start with the poor diet quality.
And last week I did a podcast on the new food pyramid that they released in January 2026.
And it's a food pyramid that I agree with.
And maybe after this podcast, you will agree with it as well.
And then when the vessels get inflamed, we have plaque formation.
So inflammation is the driver of cardiovascular disease, and it's a result of poor diet.
But if we're not giving our body good nutrients,
There are blood vessels that's transporting all this stuff we put into it to where it needs to go.
Our blood vessels get constantly assaulted and doesn't have the ability to heal.
So that's how inflammation causes cardiovascular disease.
One of the things, poor diet quality.
The other is high blood pressure.
And this is according to American Heart Association.
So someone who has hypertension, that's a risk factor.
Then you have a vulnerable vessel.
You have things in the blood that aren't healthy.
It's going to get into the vessel walls.
It's going to cause inflammation.
And then you have vulnerability in that vessel.
So high blood pressure is one of those things that is a risk factor for heart disease.
And then we have high cholesterol.
I say high cholesterol, but that is kind of an old school thinking.
So cholesterol is not the enemy.
We need it so our body makes it.
So our body actually makes cholesterol.
But eating something with cholesterol isn't necessarily the problem.
It's more the LDL particle size.
The LDL is taking things from our liver to the tissue.
And then we also think about the triglyceride to HDL ratio.
So cholesterol is needed, but when we talk about having poor cholesterol,
So that's the part that's damaging, not just having high cholesterol.
I don't really want you to be afraid of cholesterol.
I just want you to eat healthy.
When I talk about triglyceride to HDL ratio, how do we get high triglycerides?
We get high triglycerides by eating sugar. Eating too much sugar and refined carbs.
And when I'm talking about fats, I'm talking about trans fats or industrial seed oils.
They're very, very inflammatory.
Genetics can play a role to high triglycerides.
You can actually make decisions to cut that out of your daily life.
So that's the cholesterol part of contributing to cardiovascular disease.
Then we have diabetes and insulin resistance itself.
So that contributes to cardiovascular disease.
Again, diabetes and insulin resistance contribute to cardiovascular disease.
You don't want the glucose spikes.
Stay away from the glucose spikes, that means the sugars.
And then what is another contributor to cardiovascular disease?
But it's the process of getting there.
It's the process of getting to that obese state that is the problem.
Because it doesn't happen overnight, right?
It's a lifestyle of making decisions to lead to obesity.
But it is known that being obese causes a rise in inflammatory markers.
So again, it's the process of getting to that obese state.
The lifestyle that caused a person to become obese is the problem.
Or the lifestyle of not getting out of the obese state is the problem.
I'm talking mentally that cause inflammation in the body, like trauma is what I'm talking about.
I'm trying to not make it sound like if you just eat right and exercise, then you should be thin.
That's not, I know that's not the case.
Many times changing the diet to lose weight causes people to get healthier.
And when people lose weight and get healthier, the disease goes down.
But was it getting thinner and the weight loss that caused the disease to go down?
I think it was more the the lifestyle change was the bigger contributor in that sense.
So that's how obesity can cause cardiovascular disease.
So according to the CDC in 2022, 22% of U.S. adults are physically inactive.
That means one in five people at least are not active.
So again, let me say that again.
22% of people are inactive, but only 25% of people are meeting the standards of activity.
So moderate intensity of aerobic activity.
And that's not just going out for a leisurely walk.
It means you have to get your heart rate up.
And you don't have to be completely out of breath.
It's just moderate intensity, getting that heart rate up, maybe a little sweat glow.
150 minutes a week is roughly about, what, 30 minutes, five times a week, 30 minutes a day.
That's doable. It's doable for anyone.
And if you are at a loss of ideas for that, you can talk to your physical therapist.
Because the body was created to move.
It's what our body was meant to do.
And being inactive is just as unhealthy as eating unhealthy.
And then we have smoking. Smoking cigarettes has declined, but e-cigarettes is on the rise.
So when we cough, it's because the cilia is moving things out.
So that cilia gets paralyzed by smoking.
So it's unable to filter the bad stuff out of the air and it enters into our lungs.
So that's a reason why when people stop smoking, the cilia start waking back up
And eventually that goes away.
But that's the reason why people get that hacker's cough after they stop smoking.
The celia is waking up trying to clear things out.
So that is how smoking contributes to cardiovascular disease.
But then we have sleep and stress.
Chronic sleep loss and unmanaged stress elevate blood pressure and inflammation.
So go back and listen to my podcast on sleep.
I have a podcast on stress and how it damages the body and why, we need to manage it.
It's so important to get good sleep and to control our stress because they both cause inflammation.
And if we don't sleep, we don't heal.
And we have ebbs and flows in our hormones.
And when that gets thrown off, we don't sleep well.
We don't sleep well, we don't heal well.
We don't heal well, we also are inflamed.
So it's a big cycle when we don't have good sleep and stress is also kind of the same thing.
Stress causes inflammation for a lot of different reasons.
Try to get good quality sleep and control your stress.
And I don't want to make it sound so easy.
So that's another cause of cardiovascular disease.
So let me go through those again.
Let's talk about the prevalence and the death rates of cardiovascular disease.
And that sounds very depressing, but I'm going to go over it because it is such an impact on us.
Cardiovascular disease is the number one killer in the US.
Everyone knows someone that has heart disease.
Chances are someone in your family has it.
Nearly half of US adults, it's 48, 49%, have some form of cardiovascular disease.
So nearly half have some form.
So nearly half have some form of cardiovascular disease.
I'm talking to you right now, me and you.
If we're talking almost 50%, me and you, one of us, likely has cardiovascular disease.
And I don't want it to be me, and I hope you don't want it to be you.
This number is also expected to grow to 60% by 2050.
We talked about the causes of it, and they're all controllable.
That's why I'm talking about it.
All these things are controllable.
So that's just cardiovascular disease.
Almost 50% of people have some form of cardiovascular disease.
One in 20 have coronary artery disease.
If our heart muscle doesn't get nutrients and oxygen, it will die.
The heart muscle itself will die.
And that's what myocardial infarction or heart attack is.
A heart muscle doesn't repair itself. So if we damage a heart muscle, it's dead.
It's A one and done type thing.
A lot of times the first symptom for many people is death, right?
We just all of a sudden feel a chest pain and then we keel over.
There's other symptoms, of course, but we just want to not get there.
We don't want our coronary arteries to get blocked up.
So again, one in 20 adults have coronary artery disease.
Almost one out of two people have cardiovascular disease.
Almost a million people a year die of cardiovascular disease.
And that's down a little bit from 2022, but stroke rates are increasing.
Even though cardiovascular disease is down a tiny bit, stroke rates are increasing.
And stroke is still under the umbrella of cardiovascular disease.
And stroke is the 4th leading cause of death.
And these numbers highlight both the scale and the problem and the urgency of preventing.
And we can prevent this stuff.
If someone lives to be 100, you want the last few years of your life to be good years.
You don't want to live to 100 with your last 20 years being bedridden or in a wheelchair.
You want to live a good, healthy, long life.
So how do we eat to prevent cardiovascular disease?
Right now I'm just going to talk about the nutrition part of it.
Because nutrition is something that we can control.
We can make decisions to change that.
Some of the things we can do is prioritize whole, minimally processed foods.
Whole foods, minimally processed.
So ultra-processed foods drive inflammation, weight gain, and metabolic dysfunction.
And when I say metabolic dysfunction, I'm talking about insulin resistance, insulin dysregulation.
So you want to aim for foods that look as close to their natural form as possible.
And you've heard me say this before, if God didn't make it, I'm not going to eat it.
When we buy things with a shelf life, it likely has a lot of preservatives in it.
So it has a little bit of processing going on.
But the ingredients in it is just milk.
And sometimes they'll fortify it with calcium or vitamin D.
But for the most part, it is milk. That's the ingredient.
It doesn't have a long ingredient list.
That's not a whole minimally processed food.
So that's what I mean by whole food or minimally processed food.
The other thing is you want to emphasize high quality protein.
Protein supports muscle mass, metabolic health, your immune system, and your hunger.
So great options for protein are fish, especially fatty fish,
I think it's Dr. Hyman that calls it SMASH fish.
SMASH stands for salmon, mackerel, anchovies, sardines, and herring.
Those are fish with good omegas and good quality fats and low mercury risk.
So that's a good high quality protein.
When you buy poultry at the store, it should say no hormones or antibiotics.
Same thing with eggs. Eggs come from a chicken.
So you want the eggs to say that as well.
So meat without hormones or antibiotics.
Other good forms of high quality protein are legumes like lentils, beans, chickpeas.
Legumes are great in fiber and have a lot of good protein.
Another good high quality protein.
And I had mentioned earlier that fat isn't necessarily bad.
So emphasize high quality protein.
So far, what I'm mentioning is all doable stuff, right?
Whole foods, high quality protein, healthy fats.
You want to eat Good quality, healthy fats.
And I have, again, a podcast on fats because there's different types of fats.
And I'm talking about extra virgin olive oil, avocados, nuts and seeds, and fatty fish.
That's the smashed fish that I mentioned earlier.
Fats that are liquid at room temperature are the ones we want to go for healthy fats.
And I want you to limit industrial seed oils like corn, saffola, canola.
So to get oil out of a sunflower seed doesn't take the same type of processing as oil from corn.
I don't even know how they can say it comes from corn.
It's a highly processed oil and that's what I don't like.
I'm not anti-sunflower seed oil.
You're not deep frying anything in it.
You're not sauteing in it typically.
Just limit your industrial seed oils.
Trans fats like margarines, limit that.
I would choose butter over margarine.
Butter is a saturated fat because it's a natural fat that's solid at room temperature.
But margarines, margarine is a trans fat and it's not good for you.
So choose butter over margarine, real butter over margarine.
might be delicious, but it's not good for your body.
Fiber lowers cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, and supports gut health.
If you are still thinking fiber is just there to bulk up your stool, that's old school thinking.
That's the least of the problems.
Fiber is there to feed your gut microbiome.
That's what your gut microbiome feeds off of.
And fiber comes from fruits and vegetables.
So you want to eat fruits and vegetables.
Vegetables that are the color of the rainbow.
I'd rather you have a little bit of greens and mostly other types of vegetables.
Make that salad as colorful as you can.
We do have different types of lettuce that are available throughout the year.
Peas and carrots are all available at different times of the year.
So find something that you like and add it to your daily intake.
Let's see, what else is fiber?
So vegetables, fruits, beans are great when it comes to fiber and it's great for your microbiome.
Lentils, And then whole grains, let's talk about whole grains for a second when it comes to fiber.
Enriched whole grain is processed whole grain and it's not necessarily real whole grain.
On the ingredient list, it should just say whole grain and minimal ingredients after that.
And then another thing you can do is remove your added sugars and refined carbs.
Added sugar spikes your blood sugar levels.
We already know that sugar causes inflammation.
It damages your blood vessels, and it promotes insulin resistance.
So remove added sugars. We don't need sugar in our diet.
Our body makes glucose. It makes its own glucose.
But if you aren't an athlete, then you don't need to be eating refined carbs.
Refined carbs also meaning anything made of flour.
Get them out of your pantry and the next time you go to the store, just find an alternative.
And then you also want to eat more omegas, omega-3s.
You can also get it from chia seeds, flax seeds, walnuts.
So nuts and seeds are going to give good omega-3s and so is fish.
So eat more fish and nuts and seeds.
And then finally, consider your meal patterns.
Not everyone needs to eat three times a day.
I actually don't think we were meant to eat three times a day.
When I say meal patterns, I'm talking about maybe a Mediterranean diet.
A good whole food diet is going to reduce cardiovascular disease.
And then try fasting every now and then.
Fasting is something every culture around the world does.
Every religion and every culture has a fasting built into their religion or their culture.
But don't do it without knowing what you're doing.
How to eat to prevent cardiovascular disease.
I'm just going to go through it quickly.
So you're going to have to change your nutrition, which everything that I just talked about applies.
You're going to have to increase your physical activity.
If you smoke, you're going to need to stop smoking.
You're going to need to reduce your stress and then increase your sleep quality.
And then a lot of times a treatment would include medications.
You're either going to be on these medications, you're headed down that road, or you already are.
Not too often does someone just take one medication.
Some of the medications need like a side medication,
Let's not head down that road.
Let's try to reduce our medication or the potential of having to take another medication.
Or you might be a candidate for a pacemaker or a defibrillator.
So let's reduce the chances of any sort of surgeries from cardiovascular disease.
That's the most powerful intervention is prevention.
So that's what I'm talking about today.
Cardiovascular disease is common, it's deadly, and it's largely preventable.
If you can prevent it, why would you not?
Why is it a growing problem when it is so preventable?
And I'm not saying everything's going to be easy, but neither is being sick.
So this road to getting healthy is not going to be easy.
I'm not going to ever promise that to you.
Cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of death in the US.
Nearly half adults have some form of cardiovascular disease.
Again, if I'm talking to you, one of us has cardiovascular disease, according to the statistics.
But lifestyle, especially nutrition and movement, can dramatically reduce your risk.
Every meal is a chance to support your heart and your longevity.
Let me end with a scripture from the Bible.
And this one's from Proverbs 18:10.
It says, the name of the Lord is a strong tower. The righteous man runs into it and is safe.
When they say a righteous man, a righteous man isn't someone who's perfect or sinless.
And then that might help you with your daily choices.
I know it's not that easy. But become right with God, and He will be your strong tower.
So I want to thank you for joining me.
Thank you for spending time with me, taking time out of your day to listen to me.
Because prevention is so powerful and knowledge is one of the best tools we have.
Thank you for joining me today.