Could moves like Jagger help your heart just as much?

When Mick Jagger, the frontman for the Rolling Stones, underwent heart surgery, it wasn’t long before he hit the stage.

Part of his speedy recovery is due to the fact that Mr. Jagger underwent a new type of heart valve surgery called TAVR (or Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement.) This is a minimally invasive procedure whereby the aortic valve (the one-way door that controls blood flow from the heart to the body) is replaced without cutting through the breast bone or putting a patient on a heart-lung machine. This 2-minute video illustrates what happens during TAVR:

But the other reason Mick could bust a move after a very short recovery period is that he was otherwise healthy before going into the procedure. Jagger eats a healthy diet, jogs up to eight miles a day, and participates in activities like cycling, yoga, and meditation.

Related: What works better than low-fat for a healthy heart?

Although we know what procedure he had, the details of his underlying valve problem have not been released. However, given his age, the most likely diagnosis was aortic stenosis, a progressive narrowing of the aortic valve which causes a progressive restriction in the ability of blood to get out of the heart to the rest of the body.

At some point, the narrowing becomes so severe that the blood flow restriction begins to limit people’s ability to exert themselves — an obvious issue for an active man like Mr. Jagger. The TAVR video above illustrates the procedure being used to correct aortic stenosis.

Aortic stenosis becomes more common as people get older. Sometimes a congenital defect in the valve makes that degeneration happen faster.

But, in some sense, it’s amazing that even a normal aortic valve doesn’t give out when we’re five. If you think about it, that valve opens and closes with every heartbeat.  60 or more times per minute. 60 minutes per hour. 24 hours per day. 7 days per week. 52 weeks per year. For potentially over a hundred years!  If you opened and closed your front door 60 times per minute, it would probably fly off its hinges in 3 months!

Aortic stenosis is a mechanical problem that cannot be fixed with drugs. But high cholesterol, smoking, high blood pressure and diabetes, the same lifestyle factors that drive heart disease in general, seem to accelerate that mechanical degeneration. So controlling those risk factors may help keep your valves in better shape in addition to helping keep your arteries clean.

So what can we learn from Mr. Jagger? Maintaining a healthy lifestyle helps you be more resilient in general — so you can bounce back faster from any health setback. And even at 75, eating well, staying physically active and pursuing activities you enjoy can keep you as energetic and engaged as someone decades younger.

Visit Step One Foods for more on how food can help you maintain healthy cholesterol levels and cardiovascular health.

Dr. Elizabeth Klodas MD, FACC

By Dr. Elizabeth Klodas MD, FACC

"Diet is a major driver of high cholesterol, but instead of changing the food, we prescribe medications. This never seemed logical to me.” Dr. Klodas has dedicated her career to preventive cardiology. Trained at Mayo Clinic and Johns Hopkins, she is the founder and Chief Medical Officer for Step One Foods. Dr. Klodas is a nationally sought out speaker and has an active role at the American College of Cardiology. Her clinical interests include prevention of heart disease and non-invasive cardiac imaging and she has published dozens of scientific articles throughout her career. Dr. Klodas has been featured on CNN Health for her mission to change how heart disease is treated. An independent study performed at leading medical institutions affirmed the ability of Step One Foods to deliver measurable and meaningful cholesterol-reduction benefits in the real world. The results of the trial were presented at the 2018 American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions. Dr. Klodas has also authored a book for patients, "Slay the Giant: The Power of Prevention in Defeating Heart Disease," and served as founding Editor-in-Chief of the patient education effort of the American College of Cardiology. In addition to her practice and her duties at Step One Foods, she also serves as medical editor for webMD.

«SPONSORED»