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Home / Health / Diet Disasters: Foods Clogging Your Heart

Diet Disasters: Foods Clogging Your Heart

6 Dec, 2025

•

Summary

  • Nearly 20 million died from heart disease in 2022.
  • Atherosclerosis stems from inflammation and fatty deposits.
  • Seven food groups significantly raise blockage risk.
Diet Disasters: Foods Clogging Your Heart

Heart disease continues to be a leading cause of death globally, with preventable factors playing a significant role. In 2022, cardiovascular diseases claimed approximately 19.8 million lives, primarily from heart attacks and strokes, often caused by arterial blockages. These blockages develop when artery walls are damaged, leading to inflammation and fatty deposits that harden into plaque, a process known as atherosclerosis.

Certain everyday foods are particularly detrimental to arterial health. Deep-fried items, processed meats, refined carbohydrates, packaged snacks high in trans fats, excessive salt, large quantities of red meat, and artificially sweetened beverages all contribute to plaque buildup, inflammation, and elevated cholesterol levels. These dietary habits significantly increase the risk of developing heart attacks and strokes.

Beyond diet, other factors like high cholesterol, smoking, diabetes, obesity, stress, and lack of sleep exacerbate artery blockage. Adopting a heart-healthy lifestyle, which includes eating more fruits, vegetables, whole grains, lean proteins, and staying physically active, is crucial for preventing arterial narrowing and safeguarding cardiovascular well-being.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Dr. Swamy warned against deep-fried foods, processed meats, refined carbs, packaged snacks, high-salt items, excessive red meat, and artificially sweetened drinks.
Atherosclerosis causes plaque buildup, narrowing arteries and restricting blood flow to the heart, which can result in a heart attack.
The World Health Organization identifies heart disease as a leading cause of death, with a high percentage of these deaths being preventable.

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