Showing posts with label Heart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heart. Show all posts

Saturday, 25 May 2013

What Do You Treasure?

"...but store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also." - Matthew 6:20-21 NIV

Ah, the things we treasure. We treasure our car, our boats, our houses, our careers and all sorts of "things." Oh yeah, and we treasure our families. Ever heard the statement that you are known not by what you say, but by what you do?

I chuckled a while back when I read a magazine cartoon that showed a news conference called by a United States senator who announced that he was divorcing his family so he could spend more time with politics.

We may scoff at the folly of his announcement, but the truth is that many people make that same statement everyday. Maybe not with words, but with their actions. So many more, in fact, that if a politician retires from his work to spend more time with his family, it becomes the lead story met with cynicism on the evening news, while the one who rejects his family advancing his career is too plentiful to notice.

Monday, 6 May 2013

LET NOT YOUR HEART BE TROUBLED

Angel GABRIEL Troubled

Zachariah was troubled by where Gabriel stood.
Mary was also troubled about Gabriel's greeting.
Angel troubled water at Bethesda pool.


A look at the source of TROUBLED water.

John 14: Let not your heart be troubled {lawed} x2


Paul's New-er Holy Kiss Greet: Grace, Mercy, and Peace, from God, our Father, and Jesus Christ our Lord.

Tweet: Cops For Cancer? When cops came to door wearin caps sayin this slogun, I said none for me thanks, I'm not 'for' cancer. Grace doesn't f-law.

Besides old age in the new age the leading causes of death seem to be Cancer and Heart Attack. Re the C word nobody likes to hear, but is more oft mentioned and funded than Christ, my allegoric web page called 'The Operation of God', notes that God (is light and in him there is no darkness at all) removes all cancer-us law in time; For as "a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump", so also a little jot or tiddle of cancer-us law can kill the whole body, including the head (God is head of Christ, and Christ is head of man, and man is head of woman: 1Cor 11:3).

Friday, 19 April 2013

Start Speaking Faith Now


"Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh. A good man out of the good treasure of the heart bringeth forth good things: and an evil man out of the evil treasure bringeth forth evil things." (Matthew 12:34-35)


Words won't work without faith any more than faith will work without words! It takes them both to put the law of faith in motion.

Many believers don't realize that. They'll continually speak words of doubt and unbelief, then they'll jump up one day and say a couple of faith words and expect mountains to move-- and to their dismay, they don't.

Why not?

Because as Matthew 12:34-35 says, it's the words that come from the heart that produce results. The person who just throws in a couple of faith words now and then isn't speaking them from the abundance of his heart, so they're not effective.
Does that mean you shouldn't start speaking words of faith until you're sure you have the faith to back them?

Recall Notice


Play MP3
Our Daily Bread is hosted by Les Lamborn

READ: Acts 3:13-21

Repent . . . that your sins may be blotted out. —Acts 3:19

In 2010, auto manufacturers recalled a staggering 20 million cars in the US for various defects. The thought of such a large number of defective cars on the road is startling enough. But what is more disturbing is the apathy of some owners. In one instance, the executive director of the Center for Auto Safety warned owners, “It’s a free repair. Get it done. It may save your life.” Yet, despite the risk to their own lives, 30 percent never responded.
Likewise, many ignore God’s “recall notice” to the entire human race. Unlike a defect found in automobiles, the moral defect of the human race is not the Maker’s fault. He made everything “very good” (Gen. 1:31), but people’s sin ruined it. God’s offer to us is “repent . . . that your sins may be blotted out” (Acts 3:19).

Wednesday, 9 January 2013

The Way to Live with the Mind of Christ

by Joyce Meyer
One of the greatest revelations of my life is: I can choose my thoughts and think things on purpose. In other words, I don’t have to just think about whatever falls into my mind. This was a life-changing revelation for me because as Proverbs 23:7 (AMP) says, “As [a man] thinks in his heart, so is he.” I like to say it like this: Where the mind goes, the man follows.

Now God is concerned about the hidden man of the heart, which is our inner life. Our inner life is what we think about. And like the scripture above says, the way we think determines how we live and who we are. That’s why we need to think about what we’re thinking about.
It’s so important for us to understand this because if we don’t learn how to take every thought captive to the obedience of Christ (see 2 Corinthians 10:4-5), we won’t live the life Jesus died to give us – a life of peace with God, peace with ourselves, great relationships, real joy and the ability to become all God has created us to be. It comes down to choosing to believe what God says (the truth) more than we believe our feelings, what other people say or our circumstances.

Saturday, 24 November 2012

What We See in Each Other

1 Samuel 16:1–13
“The LORD does not look at the things people look at. People look at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart.”

1 Samuel 16:7

Samuel was sent to the house of Jesse to find a new king. When he got there, Samuel saw Eliab, one of Jesse’s sons. “Surely, he is the one God has chosen to be the next king,” Samuel thought. Evidently, like the previous king, Saul, Eliab was tall and striking. But Eliab was not the one God had in mind.

God warned Samuel not to assess people by their physical appearance. God reminded the old prophet that he doesn’t look at the outside; he looks at the inside. So each of Jesse’s sons passed before Samuel, but God did not indicate that any of them was the man God had sent him to find. Finally, David, the youngest son, came in from the fields. Then the Lord spoke to Samuel, telling him this was the right one.

Friday, 7 September 2012

From The Eyes of God

Written by Rev. Daniel Forster

Are you feeling overwhelmed by guilt? Let’s work through it together.

“When they came, he looked on Eliab and thought, ‘Surely the Lord’s anointed is before him.”  But the Lord said to Samuel, ‘Do not look on his appearance or on the height of his stature, because I have rejected him. For the Lord sees not as man sees: man looks on the outward appearance, but the Lord looks on the heart.’” (1 Samuel 16:6-7, ESV)

Have you heard the saying “perception is reality”? I used to believe that but praise God, He has taught me otherwise. All throughout the Bible we are taught that God does not see the same way that we do.
In 1 Samuel, the king Saul has lost the favor and spirit of the Lord our God because of his disobedience and his lack of repentance in his heart. God instructs Samuel the prophet to go to Bethlehem and seek a son of Jesse there. Samuel does not know his name. He has all of Jesse’s sons brought before him as the Lord directs him in which God will anoint as King of Israel. Today’s passage picks up the story when Samuel is looking on the sons of Jesse.

Thursday, 12 July 2012

A Time of Altars

by Jack Hayford
A Time Of Altars 140Abram passed through the land to the place of Shechem, as far as the terebinth tree of Moreh. And the Canaanites were then in the land. Then the Lord  appeared to Abram and said, “To your descendants I will give this land.” And there he built an altar to the Lord, who had appeared to him. And he moved from there to the mountain east of Bethel, and he pitched his tent with Bethel on the west and Ai on the east; there he built an altar to the Lord and called on the name of the Lord. So Abram journeyed, going on still toward the South. – Genesis 12:6-9
...to the place of the altar which he had made there at first. And there Abram called on the name of the Lord... Then Abram moved his tent, and went and dwelt by the terebinth trees of Mamre, which are in Hebron, and built an altar there to the Lord. - Genesis 13:4, 18
Altars are a memorial to the place where God meets us
Altars represent the occasion and place where we have had a personal encounter with God. We may not always be able to make a physical altar, but there can be one established in our hearts. When we celebrate communion, we are celebrating the grandest altar of all--the Cross of Calvary upon which the Son of God was laid forth as the sacrifice: To reconcile all humankind to God; and to  make possible the infusion of our lives with meaning, the forgiveness of all sins and the promise of eternal life.
Altars appear throughout the Bible in many different forms. They are: 

Saturday, 16 June 2012

Heart Problems: A Dad Shaped Hole

Written by H. Norman Wright

family_dadshapedholeNot every girl gets to be Daddy’s little girl. Many are missing the father-daughter relationship that is so essential for any child to have. The following excerpt is from H. Norman Wright’s A Dad-Shaped Hole in My Heart. Dads, see for yourself and learn how to help heal that ‘dad-shaped hole’ in your daughter’s heart. Daughters or even sons, consider what Wright has to say about that hole in your heart.
I’d like to begin this first chapter with June’s story. In many ways her story mirrors the cry of countless daughters just like you, who struggle with the effects of a dad who wasn’t there for them. Year after year they cry: Daddy, where are you? Who are you?

Saturday, 9 June 2012

How is Jesus "The Truth"?

Randy Alcorn

Truth is rooted in the eternal God who’s all powerful and unchangeable. Jesus prayed, “Sanctify them by the truth; Your word is Truth” (John 17:17).
Truth is far more than facts. It’s not just something we act upon. It acts upon us. We can’t change the truth, but the truth can change us. It sanctifies (sets us apart) from the falsehoods woven into our sin natures.
As Christ the living Word is truth, so his written word is truth. Though heaven and earth will pass away, God’s truth never will.
Over half the New Testament uses of “truth” (aletheia) are in John’s gospel. Truth is reality. It’s the way things really are. What seems to be and what really is are often not the same. As I develop in my novel Deception, “Things are not as they appear.” To know the truth is to see accurately. To believe what isn’t true is to be blind.

Saturday, 26 May 2012

What Did You Say?



Today’s Truth
“A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in a setting of silver” (Proverbs 25:11).

Friend to Friend
Fruit is one of my favorite foods. When I go grocery shopping, it always takes me longer to get through the fruit section than any other area of the store. I spend what some might consider a ridiculously long time picking out what I hope will be the juiciest apples, the plumpest grapes and sweetest bananas. Experience has taught me to quickly discard any piece of fruit that is bruised, mushy or discolored. I shake cantaloupe and thump watermelons. Ripe strawberries have a unique sweet scent and only the reddest cherries will do. Plums and tomatoes must be firm to the touch, bright in color and wrinkle-free while the more wrinkles the better when it comes to choosing passion fruit.

Friday, 25 May 2012

Three Relationships that Make Us Rich


Then one from the crowd said to Him, "Teacher, tell my brother to divide the inheritance with me."  But He said to him, "Man, who made Me a judge or an arbitrator over you?"  And He said to them, "Take heed and beware of covetousness, for one's life does not consist in the abundance of the things he possesses" (Luke 12:13-15).

This man came to Jesus to get him to "sort his brother out" over the inheritance, not realizing that his brother was the real treasure in his life - not the things he might inherit.

Here are three relationships that make us rich:

1.      Our relationship with God.  To know God makes you rich, no matter what material resources you may or may not have.

Some of those that the world would call rich are actually bankrupt when it comes to the most important treasure of all.

2.      Our relationship with others.  People, not things, are the real treasures in life.  I can honestly say that I am a rich man.  I have family and friends that I love and that love me. Things lose their meaning, and serve as a very poor substitute for relationships with people.

3.      Our relationship with our own heart.  Commune with your own heart… declares the psalmist in Psalm 4:4 (KJV).

That means hold some serious communication with your heart—get acquainted with your heart.  Don't let you and your own heart be strangers!

Tuesday, 3 April 2012

The Temple Courts: Shake Us Up, Lord!

Dr. Ray Pritchard

“My house will be called a house of prayer for all nations” (Mark 11:17).

Jesus would not put up with some things.

We have seen over and over again his compassion for the hurting and his outreach to the forgotten. He cares for those the world forgets.

Saturday, 31 March 2012

Maybe God's Waiting on You

Laura MacCorkle

Remember how the LORD your God led you all the way in the desert these forty years, to humble you and to test you in order to know what was in your heart, whether or not you would keep his commandments.

Deuteronomy 8:2

"Sometimes I wait on God to change a situation only to realize he was waiting on me."

A friend of mine said that recently, and that thought has stayed with me ever since. I'm so quick to point to outside circumstances for why God is not changing a particular situation in my life. I question, I complain. And in essence, IIsraelitize! That's right. I'm just like a cranky Israelite who's wandering in the wilderness and wondering if I'll ever reach the Promised Land.

As I refreshed my memory about the plight of the Israelites after they had been delivered from Egypt and what happened during their 40-year wilderness experience, I was reminded that they did have a earlier opportunity to enter the Promised Land—two years into their ordeal.

During those two years, the Israelites had been trained and instructed in how to fight battles (it was not if but whenthey would occur). They were also given laws (The Ten Commandments) and instructed how to worship (detailed plans and guidelines for the Tabernacle, offerings, priests, etc.). So this time period was not for naught. It was to prepare the people, to test them to see if they would trust in God, worship him and submit to him as a unified body.

But they still didn't get it. And in the face of great blessing, they chose not to trust the Lord and disobeyed him.

In Numbers 13:1, we read:

The LORD said to Moses, "Send some men to explore the land of Canaan, which I am giving the Israelites."

There it is, plain as day. God was going to give the Promised Land to the Israelites, and they knew this. But when the twelve spies came back with their report, ten of the twelve prevailed and offered their own plan:

"We went into the land to which you sent us," they said. "And it does flow with milk and honey! Here is its fruit. But the people who live there are powerful, and the cities are fortified and very large. … We can't attack those people; they are stronger than we are" (Numbers 13:27-28, 31).

The Israelites were scared and they were "sold," so they began grumbling and weeping aloud. Moses and Aaron quickly tried to reason with the people ("Do not rebel against the LORD"), but it was no use. The Israelites were going to do what they were going to do.

And then the Lord spoke:

For forty years—one year for each of the forty days you explored the land—you will suffer for your sins and know what it is like to have me against you (Numbers 14:34).

The Israelites could have experienced tremendous blessing so much sooner. But because of their disobedience, they suffered for 38 more years in the wilderness. They brought it upon themselves! And therefore, they had to wait.

It's a story that shouldn't feel too distant from you and me today—despite the time gap. Think about it. How often have you brought upon yourself the various wilderness experiences in your own life? Times when you're uncomfortable or you don't like your circumstances or you don't understand what is happening and where you're going?

Either we wait for God's perfect plan in our lives and for him to unfold events exactly when and how he wants them to be, or we will wait to get out of what we have planned for ourselves. So what are you waiting on God to do today? And what is God waiting on you to do or to learn or to repent of and confess to him?

The next time you are even thinking about turning away from God's Word and rejecting his plan for your life, remember the Israelites and get on your knees. Remember God's kindness. Remember his mercy. And remember to wait on your faithful Father whose hand has provided everything an unfaithful people will ever need.

Intersecting Faith & Life:
What are you grumbling about today? What's going on in your current wilderness? Is it a relationship? A work situation? Your spiritual life? What got you there? And what is God asking you to do in the meantime while you wait? If God's waiting on you, then it's time to pay attention and start following his plan for your life.

Further Reading:

Isaiah 30:18

Proverbs 3:5-6

**Listen to the audio/podcast version of this devotional here.

About Laura MacCorkle

Laura MacCorkle is Crosswalk.com's Senior Editor. Prior to Crosswalk, her dot-com experience began at Musicforce.com, a leading Christian music e-tailer where she was the Senior Editor. She has also worked as a copywriter for LifeWay Christian Resources in Nashville, Tennessee and KMA Direct Communications in Plano, Texas. Born in "The Lone Star State" and raised by Yankee parents, Laura enjoys reading just about any periodical, singing in a civic chorus, winning Scrabble games and playing with her two Tonkinese cats. She holds a B.A. in Communication from Messiah College in Grantham, Pa.
http://www.crosswalk.com/blogs/laura-maccorkle/maybe-gods-waiting-on-you-11640046.html

Tuesday, 27 March 2012

When Are Heart Palpitations Serious?


Source: By Teresa Cheong for Health Xchange, with expert input from the Department of CardiologyNational Heart Centre Singapore



If you have this uncomfortable sensation that your heartbeat is beating too fast, pounding too hard or skipping a beat, you may have a condition called heart palpitations. Though heart palpitations are usually harmless, it is important to rule out any serious arrhythmias (abnormal heart rhythms) or preexisting heart problems.

“Heart palpitations are a very frequent symptom in the general population and it may account for about 15% of clinic consultations here at NHCS,” says Dr Ching Chi Keong, Senior Consultant at theDepartment of Cardiology and Director of Electrophysiology and Pacing at the National Heart Centre Singapore (NHCS).

NHCS has actually been seeing more patients with heart palpitations since 2008. “Our arrhythmia clinics have increased from five sessions a week in 2008 to nine sessions a week this year,” adds Dr Ching.  

Symptoms of heart palpitations:

- Fluttering in the chest


- Pounding heartbeat


- Slow heartbeat


- Chest discomfort


- Shortness of breath


- Light-headedness


- Fainting sensation

What causes heart palpitations?

Heart palpitations are common in all age groups. “Heart palpitations among women and younger patients usually have a benign cause. Men and older patients are more likely to have palpitations caused by arrhythmias,” says Dr Ching.
Benign heart palpitations can be triggered by:
  • Stress
  • Anxiety and panic attacks
  • Excessive caffeine or alcohol
  • Nicotine
  • Stimulant medications (weight loss pills, cough and cold medicine)
  • Fever 

An electrical short-circuit in the heart

Of greater concern are heart palpitations caused by cardiac arrhythmias. Cardiac arrhythmias occur when there is a short-circuit in the electrical impulses controlling your heartbeat. This is what will cause your heart to beat too rapidly, too slowly or irregularly.

When you have arrhythmia, your heartbeat either goes very fast, over 100 beats a minute (tachycardia) or very slow, less than 60 beats a minute (bradycardia).

These arrhythmic heart palpitations can have serious implications:

Supraventricular tachycardia (SVT)This is a prevalent arrhythmia in young adults This is experienced as a sudden burst of rapid heartbeats that begin and end abruptly, lasting for seconds or hours. SVT is usually not life threatening

Atrial fibrillation 
This fast and irregular palpitation occurs in the atria or upper chambers of the heart and could last a few minutes to an hour. Atrial fibrillation arrhythmias could become chronic and lead to stroke. It is seldom life-threatening, but the heart palpitations could indicate underlying coronary artery disease or heart valve disorders.

Ventricular tachycardia (VT)
Ventricular tachycardia is a very rapid, but regular heartbeat of 100 beats or more a minute occurring in the lower chambers (ventricles) of the heart.
Sustained heart palpitations lasting more than 30 seconds are considered a medical emergency. They could indicate preexisting heart diseases such as coronary artery disease or heart valve disorders.

Ventricular fibrillation (VF)
If ventricular tachycardia is left untreated, it will lead to a life-threatening condition called ventricular fibrillation, characterised by very fast and very irregular heartbeats. It usually precedes a heart attack. You could lose consciousness within seconds and die within minutes.

Treatment of heart palpitations

Avoiding caffeine, alcohol and quitting smoking can help.
Doctors would normally prescribe oral medications such as beta-blockers and calcium channel blockers to slow down heart rates in arrhythmias.

For supraventricular tachycardia and atrial fibrillation arrhythmias, catheter ablation – a non-surgical procedure using radiofrequency energy – is a possible cure.
Heart valve disorders will require surgery.

When to seek emergency medical care

Seek immediate medical help if heart palpitations are accompanied by the following symptoms:
  • Severe chest pain
  • Shortness of breath
  • Unusual sweating
  • Loss of consciousness
It’s also important to consult without delay if you have preexisting heart conditions or a family history of sudden death.


Sudden Cardiac Death: Not So Random As It Looks

Source: Article by National Heart Centre Singapore (NHCS), Heart Health



It is estimated that 1000 Singaporeans die from sudden cardiac death (SCD) every year, about half of whom are below 60 years old.

Is sudden cardiac death the same as a heart attack?

"A sudden cardiac death, or SCD, is not a heart attack," said Dr Aaron Wong, Senior Consultant at the National Heart Centre Singapore (NHCS)"A SCD can be due to many causes but is usually caused by an abnormal heart rhythmdue to abnormal 'electrical circuit' of the heart. A heart attack is caused by blockages in the heart arteries supplying blood to the heart, causing a portion of the heart muscle to be damaged. Heart attack may lead to abnormal heart rhythm, and therefore SCD, but not always."

Unlike a heart attack, which has symptoms such as chest pains and breathlessness, SCD usually has no warning signs. The only way to treat a SCD is to set the rapid heartbeat back to its normal pace by delivering an electrical shock to the heart using a device called a defibrillator.

Patients at high risk of SCD may be advised by their doctors to have an Implantable Cardiac Defibrillator (ICD)implanted. The ICD is a pocket-sized device which detects abnormal heart beats or rhythm and sends an electric current to the heart. This electric current shocks the heart and helps to reset the heart rhythm like a mini-defibrillator.

The most common cause

The most common cause of SCD is a sudden onset of abnormal heart rhythm. This is usually due to a fast but chaotic heart rhythm called ventricular fibrillation (VF) or tachycardia (VT). An extremely slow heart rate may cause SCD as well but usually presents with prior symptoms of giddiness or fainting episodes.


In a patient with VF (a form of cardiac arrest), the heart beats 400 to 500 beats per minute and the normal rhythmic contractions of the lower chambers of the heart stop. When this happens, blood and oxygen are not pumped to the rest of the body and within seconds, the brain becomes starved of oxygen and the person loses consciousness. Without immediate treatment, the brain will cease to function and the person can die within minutes.

Who is likely to suffer from sudden cardiac death?

SCD does not randomly occur in people. Almost 75 per cent of all SCD patients show signs of a previous heart attack and 80 per cent of them have signs of coronary artery disease (CAD).


It has also been found that people who have high blood pressure, high cholesteroldiabetes mellitus, or a family history of CAD are at risk of developing CAD which in turn could lead to SCD.


According to Dr Ching Chi Keong, Consultant, Department of Cardiology at NHCS, a typical SCD patient is likely to be male, more than 35 years old and has a family history of early heart attack. There is also a higher incidence amongst South Asians.


For those who are younger than 35 years old, risk factors include:
  • a family history of sudden deaths or unexplained drownings
  • recurrent chest pain and/or fainting episodes during physical exertion and
  • known heart disease, especially hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.

Risk factors of SCD 

Coronary artery disease (CAD)
  • SCD can occur during a heart attack where the damaged heart muscle induces an abnormal heart rhythm or there is a sudden loss of heart pumping function due to massive damage to the heart muscle. The latter is usually not sudden but presents initially with symptoms of difficulty in breathing.
  • Dr Wong advises, "Patients who have CAD (e.g. previous angina, heart attackangioplasty or bypass surgery) should control their risk factors for CAD and stop smoking. Some medications have also been proven to reduce the progression of CAD, the risk of heart attack and heart failure but may have to be taken on a long term basis. Patients should not stop or reduce their medications dosage without consulting their doctors."
Poor heart function or heart failure
  • Poor heart function is usually caused by repeated injury to the heart muscle (heart attacks) that leads to scarring and subsequent loss of muscle contraction function.
  • Poor heart function can also be due to disease of the heart muscle (known as cardiomyopathy) due to an inherited heart muscle disease or virus infection.
  • SCD is one of the most common mode of death in patients with heart failure. Patients with heart failure should be on long-term medications that have been shown to improve symptoms and prolong life expectancy. Patients with severely impaired heart function may benefit from implanting an ICD to reduce the chance of dying from SCD.
Strong family history
Some heart diseases, including CAD, cardiomyopathy and some heart electrical disorders are hereditary.
  • The most common inherited risk factor is high cholesterol.
    • Extremely high cholesterol can lead to CAD and heart attack at an early age. A person whose parents or sibling had CAD at a young age or high cholesterol should have his/her cholesterol checked regularly. Aggressive control of cholesterol levels can reduce the chance of developing CAD and therefore SCD.
  • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM)
    • An abnormal thickening and arrangement of the heart muscle cells can cause VF or VT leading to SCD, especially during exertion. Certain types of HCM are prone to SCD and a person with HCM who has close family members who passed away due to SCD should have an ICD implanted.
  • Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia (ARVD)
    • A structurally abnormal right ventricle is also an inherited disorder. An ICD is often required in these patients.
  • Dilated cardiomyopathy
    • Features a dilated heart with poor heart function. The condition can also be caused by a virus infection or in some cases, is related to pregnancy.
Electrical disorders of the heart
  • Some electrical disorders of the heart can lead to SCD and occasionally can be picked up during routine ECG. Many of these disorders are also inherited, and a strong family history of SCD is important.
  • One of these disorders (known as the Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome) is caused by an extra nerve connecting the heart chambers, which can cause an 'electrical short-circuit' in the heart, resulting in a rapid heartbeat. This condition is now easily treatable with catheter ablation, a procedure where a thin tube (catheter) is advanced into the heart via a vein (usually from the leg/groin), to deliver a burst of radiofrequency energy to burn off this abnormal nerve or pathway.
  • Another type of electrical disorders that can cause SCD is due to abnormalities in the heart muscle cell membrane (e.g. Brugada's and Long QT Syndromes).
    • They frequently present in young, apparently healthy individuals with no known heart problems, although some abnormalities can often be seen in the ECG on careful examination. In many, the first presentation is usually SCD. Frequent fainting episodes or even a diagnosis of epilepsy may accompany such conditions. For these patients, the ICD is the only alternative to prevent SCD.
Awareness of your risk factors is important. "If you are more than 35 years old, do adopt a healthy lifestyle. Screen yourself for risk factors of CAD (e.g. diabetes, high cholesterol) and stop smoking, especially if you have a family history of CAD. For those who are less than 35 years old, learn to recognise the above symptoms and go for a medical check up for assessment", says Dr Ching.

What to do if you witness a sudden cardiac death

In the event a person collapses from SCD, the key to survival is early defibrillation. It has been found that each minute of delay before defibrillation reduces survival by about 10 per cent. To help a person who has collapsed from SCD, the following steps have proven to be vital.
  1. Call the ambulance.
  2. Perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR).
  3. Use the automated external defibrillator (AED), if available.

Why do young, fit men die playing sports?

By Health Xchange | Fit to Post Health
An underlying heart condition may be the cause of sudden deaths in sport events. (Health Xchange)
An underlying heart condition may be the cause of sudden deaths in sport events. (Health Xchange)
Just four days after English Premier League midfielder Fabrice Muamba suffered cardiac arrest during an English FA Cup match, Indian footballer Venkatesh suffered a similar fate during a match in Bangalore, India.
The 27-year-old Venkatesh, who was playing in a district level league match on March 21, collapsed on the field during the back end of the match.
While 23-year-old Muamba is in hospital in London recovering from his mid-match cardiac arrest, Venkatesh did not survive.
In a similar incident in Singapore a week earlier, 19-year-old Temasek Polytechnic student Muhammad Khairil Muhamad Nizam suddenly collapsed halfway through a friendly football match.
He was rushed to the hospital in an unconscious state but didn't survive. While investigations are underway into his death, initial reports indicated that he had died of heart failure.
There have been other previous sudden death incidences related to sports in Singapore. Last year, a 22-year-old Singaporean runner, Malcolm Sng Wei Ren, collapsed and died during the Standard Chartered Marathon Singapore.
What can explain such unexpected deaths?According to doctors, these sudden deaths in otherwise healthy and fit sportsmen may be explained by an underlying heart problem, compounded by vigorous physical exertion.
Dr Reginald Liew, consultant at the Department of Cardiology and deputy director of the research and development unit at the National Heart Centre Singapore (NHCS) said an underlying heart problem could include:
  • a heart muscle disorder (e.g. abnormal thickening of heart muscles)
  • an electrical problem (e.g. abnormal heart rhythm)
  • an infection weakening the heart muscle
  • a congenital abnormality of the coronary arteries
"The first two of these causes often have a genetic predisposition, meaning they may be related to certain mutations," Liew said. Given the appropriate stimuli and triggers, all four scenarios, he explained, could result in ventricular fibrillation: the heart ventricles don't contract properly, which may cause the heart to stop suddenly.
Who's at risk?Sometimes, the victim is found to have a family history of sudden death. But sudden cardiac arrest can also occur in healthy individuals without any known pre-existing heart issues and with no known family history of sudden death.
Liew added that there are screening tests available for the detection of heart muscle diseases and heart electrical disorders. For example, an echocardiogram can detect the former, and 12-lead ECG, the latter.
What can you do to lessen your risk of heart disease?
  • Have your cholesterol levels checked once a year. Excess cholesterol can cause the blood flow to the heart to become blocked or reduced.
  • Get your blood pressure checked yearly. If your blood pressure is persistently above 140/90mmHg and left untreated, it can result in damage to the heart and blood vessels.
  • Control your diabetes and monitor your blood sugar levels.
  • Lose excess body fat, especially around the waist.
  • Exercise regularly to help prevent heart and blood vessel disease. Just check with your doctor first if you have known coronary artery disease or if you're above 40 years of age and have been inactive.
  • Quit smoking. Smokers have two to three times the risk of non-smokers of sudden cardiac death. In fact, smokers account for about 40 per cent of deaths caused by heart disease in patients who are younger than 65 years.
  • Manage your stress. Prolonged stress may contribute to a heart attack. Emotional stress and tension also cause the body to produce adrenaline, which makes the heart pump faster and harder, and may also cause the blood vessels to narrow down.
This article was written by the Health Xchange Editor, with expert input from the Department ofCardiology and Research and Development Unit at the National Heart Centre Singapore (NHCS).
Find more health-related tips and articles on HealthXchange.com.sg, Singapore's trusted health and lifestyle portal. Health Xchange's articles are meant for informational purposes only and cannot replace professional surgical, medical or health advice, examination, diagnosis, or treatment.
All the junkfoods and chemically-laced preserved food stuck in the guts for years and mutated into toxins and re-introduce to the blood via the intestinal villi - this is a more probable cause of most of the diseases including sudden death as the "toxins" can mutate into so many possibilities ie: cholesterol, uric acid, assorted bad bacteria: some of these that are cancer-forming. So clean your guts and plugged your mouth from junks (creation of men) and seafoods and eat natural (boiled, raw juiced, natural fruits, veggies, rootcrops) and you will never go wrong. Take it from God - (1Timothy 4:4) "For every creature of God is good, and nothing to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving.."
A Yahoo! User  •  Singapore, Singapore 
Cardiac Doctors always have the last say!? Why not specialists in Lung illnesses and weak conditions? I know of a young man who died because of a torn lung? Due to disconnected or poorly co-ordinated growth which implicates hormonal effects in genetically modified food?
Come out with the truth for all our young people.

Friday, 23 March 2012

The chia craze


Many people in the UK won't have heard of the chia seed, but if regulators give their backing this US superfood craze could be on the way.
Goji berries, kombucha, wheatgrass, acai berries. It seems rarely a year passes without at least one new health-food frenzy.
Everything from handfuls of strange seeds to bacteria-infested yoghurts to espresso-style shots of odd-tasting green juices are touted as a shortcut to wellbeing.
Chia will soon be joining the list. So what exactly is it?
Chia, or Salvia hispanica L., is a member of the mint family from Mexico and South America. The flowering plant can sprout in a matter of days, but chia's appeal is in the nutritional punch of its tiny seeds.
With more omega-3 fatty acids than salmon, a wealth of antioxidants and minerals, a complete source of protein and more fibre than flax seed, the seeds have been dubbed a "dieter's dream", "the running food", "a miracle", and "the ultimate super food", by advocates and athletes.
To some the seeds taste utterly bland, but to others there is a slight nutty flavour. It also can seem expensive compared with other seeds and nuts.

What's in 100g of chia?

  • Energy: 330kcal
  • Protein: 20.7g
  • Fat: 32.8g
  • Carbohydrate: 41.8g
  • Fibre: 41.2g
  • Calcium: 714mg
  • Iron: 16.4mg
  • Niacin (B3): 613mg
  • Thiamine (B1): 0.18mg
  • Riboflavin (B2): 0.04mg
Source: National Science Research Institute

In the UK, the seeds are only currently allowed for sale as a bread ingredient, but over the next few weeks, the Advisory Committee on Novel Foods and Processes is poised to allow chia seeds in a wide variety of products including baked goods, breakfast cereals and nut and seed mixes.
Elsewhere in the world, chia-seed products have been springing up over the past few years. In 2011, 72 new chia products hit the market and 28 new chia foods are already out this year, according to research group Mintel. Compare that with only seven new chia products for all of 2006 and you get a sense of its growing popularity.
The US is particularly infatuated with the seed, introducing 21 new chia items in 2011 and 13 in 2012. It's in sweets, snack foods, seasonings, yogurt and even baby food.
To chia cheerleaders the seeds do no wrong. They claim chia reduces inflammation, improves heart health, and stabilises blood sugar levels. A few tablespoons are touted as remedying just about anything - without any ill effects

Health food crazes

  • Gojii berries: prounced go-gee, the Himalayan fruit is hyped as a "fruit Viagra" and "cellulite-busting" superfood
  • Kombucha: the fermented tea is touted as a tonic for digestion problems, hair loss and other ailments
  • Acai berries: pronounced ah-sih-ee, advocates claim the palm tree fruit cleanses the colon, prevents cancer and boosts weight loss
  • Wheat grass shots: the concentrated juice made of young wheat plant shoots is purported to have curative properties, particularly for digestion
  • Wheatgrass 
  • So is this new superfood all it's cracked up to be?
    "In terms of nutritional content, a tablespoon of chia is like a smoothie made from salmon, spinach and human growth hormone," writes Christopher McDougall in Born to Run, the bestselling book about an ultra-distance running tribe in Mexico who fuel their epic jaunts with the seeds. The book is credited with shining the spotlight on chia as food for athletes.
    "If you had to pick just one desert-island food, you couldn't do much better than chia, at least if you were interested in building muscle, lowering cholesterol, and reducing your risk of heart disease; after a few months on the chia diet, you could probably swim home," McDougall adds.
    Wayne Coates, co-author of Chia: Rediscovering a Forgotten Crop of the Aztecs, agrees. The University of Arizona professor started experimenting with the seeds in South America more than 20 years ago as part of project to identify alternative crops for farmers in Argentina. He then started cultivating the seeds commercially.
    "I hate to call it a miracle food because there are too many miracles that turn out not to be, but it almost is. Literally, you could live on this stuff because it's pretty much everything you need," Coates says.

    Elisabeth Weichselbaum of the British Nutrition Foundation admits she hadn't heard of chia, but she says the foundation doesn't buy into the idea of a single superfood.
    "It is true that some foods are higher in vitamins and minerals, but no single food provides us with everything we need. So the best way to be healthy is to eat a variety of foods," she says.
    As an avid runner, Coates relies on the seeds to power his way through 50 and 100-mile races.
    "I actually carry it in a film canister on my runs, I down a half a canister and wash it down with water."

    How chia is eaten

    Bread contains chia
    • Mixed in couscous
    • Added to bread or muffin mix
    • Sprinkled over salad
    • Chia gel - seeds are soaked in water to form a gel-like substance added to jelly, jam, yoghurt or salad dressing
    • Agua fresca de chia - seeds are stirred with water, lime juice and sugar to make a cold drink
    Source: AZChia
    Jeffrey Walters of the chia producer Omega 3 Chia is also a firm believer. He says the company has received inquiries from the United Nations World Food Programme to bump up the nutrient content of their rice dole.
    Walters says he has also been contacted by schools looking to sneak nutritional value into canteen fare and doomsdayers searching for a nutrient-dense food to stockpile in the event of a catastrophe.
    David Nieman, director of the Human Performance Lab at Appalachian State University, has analysed the nutritional content of chia and its impact on health in a series of studies. Nieman says the seeds "as a nutritional package are wonderful", but they're no "magic pill".
    "If you grind it up and sprinkle it on cereal and put it in yogurt, or put it in juice then you are giving yourself a nutritional boost. You're definitely adding to your mineral, fibre, protein, and omega-3 intake, but will it magically cure disease or take away risk factors? It's almost like a cult following for some of these chia people, they claim everything under the sun.
    "But after 10 to 12 weeks we don't see anything happening to disease risk factors in free-living people."
    Walters says business has doubled each year for the past four years.
    In the UK, chia is permitted in bread products at concentrations up to 5%, according to the Advisory Committee on Novel Foods and Processes.
    But that's set to change. The ACNFP recently released a largely positive draft opinion on the expanded use of chia seeds in other foodstuffs.
    Walters has already seen a drive toward the UK market. One of his clients requested a huge quantity of chia for UK products for 2013.
    Health food chain Holland and Barrett already offers whole and milled chia seeds online, ostensibly as a bread ingredient.
    "Interest in chia has been building for the last two years, but it is only in the last six months that the product has been readily available in the UK," according to Holland & Barrett's nuts and seeds manager Douglas Thompson.
    Although the hype may be new in the UK, the seeds have been around for hundreds of years. The Aztecs replied on chia as a staple food and revered it enough to use for religious ceremonies and medicinal purposes, according to Coates.
    "It disappeared for 500 years and the only place you could find it is in a few little villages in Mexico and Guatemala," Coates says.
    Ray Rice of the Baltimore Ravens 

     American footballer Ray Rice is one of the athletes advocating chia
    But even before Coates and his team picked up on the seeds, chia had something of a cult following in the US.
    Until recently, most Americans would recognise it as the cheesy Christmas gift of choice circa 1990. The Chia Pets, terracotta figurines which spout chia in place of hair, grow from the same seeds.
    As with any other "miracle food", it's important not to see chia as a panacea, says Dr Catherine Ulbricht, founder of the Natural Standard Research Collaboration.
    "People think with natural therapies that they can take as much as they want because it's natural, but they do have potential side effects just like any therapy," she says.
    "Anything that can have an action in your body can also have a reaction. Nothing is 100% spot-on all benefit."