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Cholesterol Facts
Atherosclerosis
When there is too much cholesterol in your blood, the excess
can become trapped in the walls of your arteries. By building
up there, the cholesterol helps to cause hardening of the
arteries or atherosclerosis.
And atherosclerosis causes most
heart attacks by slowing or even blocking the flow of blood to
the heart. When this happens, the heart gets less oxygen than
it needs. This weakens the heart muscle, and chest pain
(angina) may occur. If a blood clot forms in the narrowed
artery, a heart attack (myocardial infarction) or even death
can result.
Carbs and Heart Disease
Researchers think that a diet heavy on sugar-refined
carbohydrates (such as white bread, low-fiber cereals and
white rice) upsets levels of good and bad cholesterol and
interferes with the body's ability to use insulin. Healthful
carbs such as whole grains, fruits and vegetables, on the
other hand, get the green light.
Cholesterol Build Up
Cholesterol build-up happens very slowly; you are not even
aware of it. If you lower your high blood cholesterol level,
you can slow, stop, or even reverse the build-up and lower
your likelihood of death from heart disease.
Cholesterol Explained
Cholesterol is a waxy substance that occurs naturally in all
parts of the body. Your body needs cholesterol, which it uses
to make many hormones and vitamin D. Cholesterol also aids in
fat digestion. Your body makes enough cholesterol to meet its
needs. You can also get cholesterol from the foods you eat.
Only foods from an animal source such as meat, poultry, fish
and dairy foods contain cholesterol.
Choosing Between Butter and Margarine
If dry toast just isn't appealing, you may wonder which spread
is healthier: butter or margarine. Margarine wins, according
to the American Dietetic Association. That's because it has no
cholesterol and less saturated fat than its dairy cousin. And
for the healthiest spread, the group says to choose margarine
in a tub over the stick variety.
Eat More Beans
Beans and other legumes contain pectin which surrounds
cholesterol and escorts it from the body.
Fruit Helps Lower Cholesterol
Fruit contains pectin that helps lower cholesterol. The best
fruits to eat to battle high cholesterol are grapefruit,
oranges and apples.
Nutrition Therapy
Many people who try nutrition therapy for increased
cholesterol levels notice a change in their condition within a
few weeks and only need two or three visits.
Potential Cholesterol Fighters
The following substances are potential weapons against high
cholesterol: tea, lemongrass oil, spirulina, barley, oats,
rice bran and activated charcoal.
Supplements to Decrease Cholesterol
The following supplements that have shown the most promise in
lowering cholesterol: niacin, vitamin C, vitamin E and
calcium.
Switch to Olive Oil
Olive oil, nuts, avocados, canola oil and peanut oil are high
in monounsaturated fat which helps lower bad (LDL) cholesterol
levels.
Types of Fats
Types of fats include:
* Polyunsaturated fat (10% of calories) - corn oil, soybean
oil, safflower oil, sesame oil, cottonseed oil, sunflower oil
* Monounsaturated fat (10-15% of calories) - olive oil, peanut
oil, canola (rapeseed) oil
* Saturated fat (less than 10% of calories) - butter, cream,
whole milk, ice cream, cheese, meat marbling, coconut, palm
kernel oil, palm oil, hydrogenated fat, cocoa butter.
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