Diet Consultants Springfield VA

Diet, along with a healthy dose of daily exercise, can do your body just as much good. In fact, eating cholesterol-lowering foods regularly, such as oats, almonds, and barley, can lower your levels just as effectively as statins—and a lot more safely.

Michelle Berman
(703) 504-8702
131 Church St NW
Vienna, VA
Company
Ms. Michelle K Berman, MS, RD
Industry
Nutritionist

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Denise E Bruner, MD
(703) 532-7546
5015 Lee Hwy Ste 201
Arlington, VA
Specialties
Internal Medicine, Nutrition, Family Medicine
Gender
Female
Languages
French
Education
Medical School: Howard Univ Coll Of Med, Washington Dc 20059
Graduation Year: 1979
Hospital
Hospital: Virginia Hospital Center -Arl, Arlington, Va
Group Practice: Denise E Bruner & Assoc

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Ashok Ray Prasad, MD
(248) 476-9040
Washington, DC
Specialties
Internal Medicine, Nutrition
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Wayne State Univ Sch Of Med, Detroit Mi 48201
Graduation Year: 1982
Hospital
Hospital: Sinai Grace Hosp, Detroit, Mi; Huron Valley -Sinai Hospital, Commerce Twp, Mi
Group Practice: Oakland Affiliated Internists

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George Washington Center for Integrative Medicine
(202) 833-5055
908 New Hampshire Ave, Suite 200
Washington, DC
Services
Yoga, Yeast Syndrome, Women's Health, Wellness Training, Weight Management, Therapeutic Touch, Supplements, Student, Stress Management, Spiritual Attunement, Research, Reiki, Psychotherapy, Psychosomatic Medicine, Psychiatry, Preventive Medicine, Pain Management, Oncology, Nutrition, Mind/Body Medicine, Metabolic Medicine, Meditation, Massage Therapy, Internal Medicine, Hypnosis/Hypnotherapy, Homeopathy, Herbal Medicine, Healthy Aging, Healing Touch, Gynecology, Guided Imagery, Geriatrics, Gener
Membership Organizations
American Holistic Medical Association

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Walter Henry Glinsmann, MD
(202) 484-5050
Washington, DC
Specialties
Internal Medicine, Nutrition
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Columbia Univ Coll Of Physicians And Surgeons, New York Ny 10032
Graduation Year: 1960

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Irwin Family Health LLC
(703) 780-1261
1240 North Pitt Street
Alexandria, VA
Services
Stress Management, Family Therapy, Pediatrics, Women's Health, Nutrition, Homeopathy, Family Practice
Membership Organizations
American Holistic Medical Association

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Deborah Jeffery
(703) 201-1184
2501 N Glebe Rd
Arlington, VA
Company
Deborah Jeffrey, RD, LD
Industry
Nutritionist, Mental Health Professional, Osteopath (DO)

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Clifford Wayne Callaway, MD
2311 M St NW Ste 301
Washington, DC
Specialties
Internal Medicine, Nutrition, Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Northwestern Univ Med Sch, Chicago Il 60611
Graduation Year: 1967
Hospital
Hospital: Sibley Mem Hosp, Washington, Dc

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Arthur Frank, MD
(202) 223-3077
3 Washington Cir NW Ste 208
Washington, DC
Specialties
Internal Medicine, Nutrition
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: New York Univ Sch Of Med, New York Ny 10016
Graduation Year: 1962
Hospital
Hospital: George Washington Univ Hosp, Washington, Dc
Group Practice: George Washington Weight Mgmt

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Creative Life Sciences
(800) 813-5888
Phone sessions available
Washington, DC
Specialty
Akashic Records, Animal Health, Channeling, Distance Healing, Energy Healing, Feng Shui, Guided Imagery, Healing Touch, Medical Intuitive, Meditation, Medium, Metaphysics, Nutrition, Past Life Regression, Pranic Healing, PSYCH-K, Psychic, Reiki, Remote Healing

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The Healthy Heart Diet

Provided by: 

By Lambeth Hochwald
recipes by Maria Cooper


When Mary Anne Nally of Southold, New York, went for her annual physical, she feared what her doctor might say when he saw her blood-test results. “High cholesterol runs in my family, and even though I eat a relatively healthy diet, I had a sneaking suspicion mine was high too,” says the 54-year-old. “I was afraid my doctor might want to put me on a statin drug, which I really didn’t want to take.” When her doctor did, indeed, suggest a statin, Nally asked him to give her three months to get her cholesterol down on her own. He agreed, but warned her that she’d have to work hard. “He said I would need to start exercising regularly and completely overhaul my diet.”

With at least 11 million Americans taking statin drugs to keep their cholesterol levels under control, popping a pill to get your numbers down seems like a no-brainer. But the research is clear: Diet, along with a healthy dose of daily exercise, can do your body just as much good. In fact, according to a recent study conducted at the University of Toronto, eating cholesterol-lowering foods regularly, such as oats, almonds, and barley, can lower your levels just as effectively as statins—and a lot more safely.
“Diet is definitely the key to lowering cholesterol without drugs,” says Judith Stanton, MD, an internist who combines conventional internal medicine with alternative and complementary therapies in her Berkeley, California, practice. Stanton sites multiple studies on how a Mediterranean diet—which consists of mostly fruits, vegetables, grains, and olive oil—has been shown to reduce the risk of heart disease by 72 percent, while cholesterol-lowering drugs only decrease the risk of heart disease by 34 percent.

Whether you take a statin now, your doctor has threatened to prescribe one, or you want to avoid that possibility, changing your eating habits can have a lifelong impact on your heart health.

Cholesterol 101
Over the last 20 years or so, cholesterol has gotten a pretty bad rap. Fact is, literally every cell of the body needs this waxy, fat-like substance to help digest fats, strengthen cell membranes, and make hormones. Because of the essential role cholesterol plays, the body creates all it needs on its own—about 1,000 mg a day. However, we get even more from some of the foods we eat; egg yolks and meat, for example, have the most, while plant-derived foods have none at all.

In order for cholesterol to reach our cells, it must rely on special carriers called lipoproteins: low-density lipoproteins (LDL) and high-density lipoproteins (HDL) to be exact—two terms often tossed around respectively as “bad” and “good” forms of cholesterol. Why the value judgments? To answer that, it helps to know what each one does, says Robert Marshall, MD, assistant professor of medicine at Georgetown Hospital in Washington, DC.

LDL carries cholesterol through the body and deposits it in the cells. HDL transports any cholesterol the...

Author: Lambeth Hochwald

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