Red is a Heart-Healthy Color

Red foods like tomatoes, watermelon, sweet red peppers, red grapefruit, and papaya all contain a powerful, heart-healthy carotenoid called lycopene. According to an article by Dr. Joel Fuhrman, You Say Tomato--We Say Lycopene, a Protective Carotenoid, 85% of lycopene in the American diet comes from tomatoes. While fresh tomatoes are packed with lycopene, tomato sauce or tomato paste has even more because the cooking process removes much of the water thus concentrating the goodness in tomatoes. Plus, the heat of the cooking process releases the lycopene from the tomato's cell walls, making it more available to your system.

Tomatoes Provide Protection

Many studies have been done showing the protective qualities of lycopene. The results are impressive!

Your Cardiovascular System Loves Tomatoes!

Lycopene has also been studied for its heart-protective properties.

Why Your Heart Loves Lycopene

Lycopene is a potent antioxidant believed to be twice as powerful as beta-carotene and packs ten times the punch of Vitamin E. Antioxidants help prevent oxidation of LDL particles in the blood, which is an early step in the formation of atherosclerotic plaque. Lycopene helps to keep plaque from forming. Oxidative damage can also reduce the function of the endothelial cells which line the blood vessels and help regulate blood pressure. One study demonstrated that a diet rich in tomatoes could improve endothelial function in as little as two weeks while another study showed that even patients with existing cardiovascular disease had a 63% improved blood flow in as few as eight weeks when treated with lycopene.

But lycopene is more than just an antioxidant. Studies show that when participants consumed tomato products on a daily basis -- roughly 1 cup of tomato juice or 3-4 tablespoons of tomato paste -- LDL cholesterol was reduced by 10%. Like statin drugs, it appears that lycopene inhibits the enzyme responsible for making cholesterol but without the side-effects caused by statins. Further, lycopene has several anti-inflammatory properties that may prevent excessive proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells, which contributes to the formation of atherosclerotic plaque.

Lycopene is a Lover Not a Loner

Like all antioxidants, lycopene works best when it's not alone. Plant-based antioxidants, phytochemicals, and other micronutrients work synergistically to protect against disease. Eating a diet rich in colorful fruits and vegetables--including tomatoes--provides the best protection for your cardiovascular system.

Click on the following links for additional information:

(1) Lower Your Cholesterol Using Fiber!

(2) What's the Daily Required Need for Cholesterol?

(3) Eating Beans Lowers Cholesterol

(4) Starch-Smart Diet Lowers Cholesterol

(5) Desirable Cholesterol Numbers

(6) Statin Drugs and Cholesterol Reduction

(7) Genetics and Lowering Cholesterol

(8) Caldwell Esselstyn Discusses the Problems with Statin Drugs

(9) Cholesterol-lowering drugs get more risky: link to kidney injury

(10) Lycopene associated with reduced risk of disease in women

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