Recommendations for Ramadan fasting to patients with cardiovascular diseases; Turkish Society of Cardiology consensus report
View/ Open
Access
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessDate
2021Author
Alper, Ahmet TahaAkboğa, Mehmet Kadri
Özcan, Kazım Serhan
Tengiz, İstemihan
Türk, Ugur Önsel
Yıldız, Mustafa
Gazi, Emine
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Alper, A. T., Akboga, M. K., Özcan, K. S., Tengiz, I., Türk, U. O., Yildiz, M., . . . Yildirir, A. (2021). Recommendations for ramadan fasting to patients with cardiovascular diseases; turkish society of cardiology consensus report. Anatolian Journal of Cardiology, 25(5), 284-293. doi:10.5152/ANATOLJCARDIOL.2021.206Abstract
Fasting is one of the important rituals in Islam. According to
the Islamic faith, it is an obligation for all Muslims. It is also a
common practice in other religions such as Christianity, Judaism,
and Hinduism and for philosophies such as Buddhism, Taoism,
and Jainism. Each belief or sect has a different type of fasting
according to their creed. The fasting period and practice may
differ. For example, the Ramadan for Sunni Muslims, Muharram
for Alevi Muslims and Lent for Catholics are specific periods for
fasting. Ramadan fasting lasts for 29-30 days, Muharram fasting
for 10-12 days, and Lent fasting lasts for 40 days. The Ramadan
fasting period may vary with the geographic region, but generally it is 12 hours long. It can be as long as 22 hours in the polar
regions during summertime (1-4).