High-Fat diet increases the high level of cholesterol due to which it increases the chances of heart attack.
a high fat diet can couse several heart diseases.
Ruthe Eshleman has written: 'A.H.A. Cookbook' 'The American Heart Association cookbook' -- subject(s): Heart, Diseases, Low-cholesterol diet, Recipes, Heart Diseases, Cookery, Diet therapy 'Am Heart Assoc Cookbk'
Heart diseases are common diseases due to high fat intake. Rheumatoid arthritis, gallstones, diabetes, asthma are the other diseases due to high fat diet. There are many diseases associated with fat diet some of the examples are listed below: heart diseases diabetes Bone related problems due to over weight breathing problem etc
Sally Bee has written: 'The secret ingredient' -- subject(s): Heart, Diseases, Recipes, Nutritional aspects, Low-fat diet, Diet therapy, Low-calorie diet, Cooking (Natural foods), Prevention, Heart diseases
Examples of diet-related diseases are hypertension, heart disease, cholesterol, cancer, diabetes and osteoporosis.
If a person's diet doesn't improve, they could get diabetes, heart disease, and even cancer. Some people often have these diseases before they even decide to change their diet.
There are diseases called diabetes and heart disease that come from poor diet that can (kill).
Heart disease is common if you do not maintain a healthy diet and lifestyle. If your diet is high in processed foods, sodium, fat, and cholesterol, and you do not regularly exercise, you will be more prone to develop heart disease.
High-Fat diet increases the high level of cholesterol due to which it increases the chances of heart attack.
You could do a project about how exercise can influence heart disease. You can also talk about how diet affects heart disease.
Excess calories in your diet can lead to being overweight, obesity, diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, stroke.
Some non-communicable diseases related to lifestyle factors include heart disease, type 2 diabetes, obesity, and certain types of cancer. Lifestyle choices such as diet, physical activity, smoking, and alcohol consumption can increase the risk of developing these diseases.