Alcohol and your heart: What you need to know

This Week's Tip

Alcohol and your heart: What you need to know
Research shows that drinking too much—and possibly too little—seems to increase one's risk of heart disease. People who drink moderately (defined as no more than one drink day for women and two drinks daily for men) have a lower risk of heart disease than nondrinkers. However, the American Heart Association does not recommend that teetotalers start drinking (or that drinkers increase the amount they drink) in order to achieve these purported benefits. Drinking too much has far more risks than not drinking.

Too much alcohol can raise blood pressure and triglycerides, as well as contribute to obesity, irregular heartbeat, cardiomyopathy, alcoholism, heart failure, cancer, stroke and other diseases. To protect your heart, cut back on drinking; if you don't drink often—or at all—don't start.

How Alcohol Affects Your Heart

More Tips for a Healthy Heart
 
Heart Friendly Recipe

Beef and Blue Sandwich
Sandwiches so good, you'll think someone brought home takeout from your neighborhood deli!

Get the Recipe

See More Healthy Heart Recipes


Nutritional Info
Servings Per Recipe: 4
 Amount Per Serving
 Calories: 325
Total Fat: 9.8 g
Cholesterol: 79.6 mg
Sodium: 358.9 mg
Total Carbs: 27.7 g
  Dietary Fiber: 5.7 g
Protein: 33.5 g
View full nutritional breakdown of Beef and Blue Sandwich by ingredient


 
  From Our Healthy Heart Community

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