viviennem said:NICE gudelines for cholesterol levels from about 2004 - don't think they've changed much:
Target levels:
Total - below 5
HDL - above 1.4
Triglycerides - below 1.7 and the lower the better
LDL - below 3.
Very important is the Total:HDL ratio - target is below 5:1, and preferably 3.5:1
SweetHeart said:MH has just got his cholesterol levels, I think the overall level is 5.8 (lower than on diagnosis)
HDL 1.4
LDL 4.0
I don't have the trigs.
The doc wants to haul him in and talk about his Statins......he stopped taking the Simvastatin as he doesn't agree with him.
What else can we do to lower the LDL ? We low carb and I think MH eats maybe 80 to 100g carbs per day.
Ju
SweetHeart said:MH, I think, eats between 80 to 100g per day (that I know of!) it's possibly less than that. We do need to cut his carb total down as his BG levels have risen, on average, by 1.0mmol since he stopped the 500mg Met daily last week.
Any help is appreciated here; as I got him low carbing, I feel that I'm responsible for anything that happens to his body dietwise.
Dr Richard Feinman said:Dietary carbohydrate restriction is the single most effective method (except for total starvation) of reducing triglycerides, and is as effective as any intervention, including most drugs, at increasing HDL and reducing the number of small-dense LDL particles. Beyond lipid markers, carbohydrate restriction improves all of the features of metabolic syndrome.
LittleGreyCat said:If there are three main components (HDL, LDL, Tri) then arithmetic suggests that the tris are (5.8 - 4.0 - 1.4) 0.4.
So it may not be that straightforward.
[/quote]borofergie said:viviennem said:NICE gudelines for cholesterol levels from about 2004 - don't think they've changed much:
Target levels:
Total - below 5
HDL - above 1.4
Triglycerides - below 1.7 and the lower the better
LDL - below 3.
Very important is the Total:HDL ratio - target is below 5:1, and preferably 3.5:1
Total 5.8
His Trigs are 2, calculated from his Total.
HDL 1.4
LDL 4.0
Total:HDL ratio = 4.1
So the good new is that his HDL is good, as you'd expect on a low-carb diet.
from a reply toHDL and trigs are NOT independent of macronutrient ratios. And you cannot conclude that these lipids are the CAUSE of anything without explaining why they fail to predict the CV risk in the Kitavans.
A high HDL and low fasting trigs do seem to be a marker for low CV risk ON THE SAD. But you are not scientifically justified in concluding that raising your HDL and lowering your trigs by eating low carb lowers your risk BECAUSE of the change in these lipid markers. And there is no clinical evidence that changing these parameters via diet results in fewer CV events, just like there is no evidence that reducing LDL or total serum cholesterol does so.
Belief in the efficacy of low carb to lower CV risk based on “blood lipid” is an unjustified myth being promoted by low carb diet doctors who have simply not thought things through carefully enough.
And to the degree that people stay hyper caloric (stay fat and in energy excess) and reassure themselves that they have “great labs” they are simply whistling past the graveyard.
They would be better to have “bad” HDL and “bad” trigs and be THIN on a high carb diet – just like the Kitavans.
phoenix wrote
The trigs aren't 2.
The formula is LDL cholesterol = Total cholesterol – HDL cholesterol – Total triglyceride ÷ 2.19 (in mmol/l)
phoenix said:The trigs aren't 2.
The formula is LDL cholesterol = Total cholesterol – HDL cholesterol – Total triglyceride ÷ 2.19 (in mmol/l)
http://www.heartuk.org.uk/images/upload ... Method.pdf
therefore:
Trigs =2.19(TC-HDL-LDL)
which equals 0.876mmml/l : much lower.
What these levels mean is open to debate
HDL and trigs are NOT independent of macronutrient ratios. And you cannot conclude that these lipids are the CAUSE of anything without explaining why they fail to predict the CV risk in the Kitavans.
A high HDL and low fasting trigs do seem to be a marker for low CV risk ON THE SAD. But you are not scientifically justified in concluding that raising your HDL and lowering your trigs by eating low carb lowers your risk BECAUSE of the change in these lipid markers. And there is no clinical evidence that changing these parameters via diet results in fewer CV events, just like there is no evidence that reducing LDL or total serum cholesterol does so.
Belief in the efficacy of low carb to lower CV risk based on “blood lipid” is an unjustified myth being promoted by low carb diet doctors who have simply not thought things through carefully enough.
Seems he's following the Friedewald formula which treats trigs as approximately 5 times the level of VLDL
SweetHeart said:What else can we do to lower the LDL ? We low carb and I think MH eats maybe 80 to 100g carbs per day.
librarising said:A
A less confused Geoff :roll:
Jeannemum said:Trig 1.3
HDL 1.9
LDL 2.2
Total 4.7
borofergie said:Jeannemum said:Trig 1.3
HDL 1.9
LDL 2.2
Total 4.7
Wow, what great results. Another indication that LCHF is great for blood lipids (despite what the propaganda says). I hope that mine are as good as these when I pick them up next week.
If this is true then it means that people diagnosed with high cholesterol and triglycerides have been put on a high carb diet that will actually make their condition worse :sick:librarising said:Here's what I wrote in this thread on cholesterol :
viewtopic.php?f=25&t=29449&p=275138#p275138
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Re: cholesterol
by librarising » May 17th, 2012, 8:57 am
Davideb wrote :
With not eating all these carbs and more protein, what happens to your cholesterol levels
What few doctors will be telling you at the moment is that it's the carbs which are giving you bad cholesterol readings, particularly high triglycerides.
Doctors believe it's to do with meat, saturated fat, eggs etc (dietary cholesterol).
From my latest library read
(Life Without Bread, How A low-Carbohydrate Diet Can Save your Life) :
"we have convincing proof of falling cholesterol levels in people of different ages who adopt a low-carbohydrate diet over the long term ... the cholesterol level of the diet lies approximately 50 percent above what the general population takes in ... yet patients' blood cholesterol levels dropped, DESPITE a large increase in the consumption of cholesterol and animal fats ... the level of triglycerides in 118 patients in Dr Lutz's practice dropped an average of more than 50 percent after only three months on a low-carbohydrate diet."
There's plenty of other research that agrees with these findings
Geoff
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You might want to read through the thread.
I think a total over 5 is a trigger for GPs to consider statins.
My latest was 5.4 but told GP I wouldn't consider statins.
Ideally I'd want to know what triglycerides were, since I've read that the ratio of tri's to HDL is all important, and the rest is largely irrelevant.
I urge all to read The Great Cholesterol Con by Malcolm Kendrick.
Geoff
p.s. Stephen, how did you calculate the trigs ?
Per Denise Minger (I think) a trigs/HDL ratio under 2 is good.
2/1.4 is therefore good, giving a ratio of 1.4
SouthernGeneral6512 wrote
If this is true then it means that people diagnosed with high cholesterol and triglycerides have been put on a high carb diet that will actually make their condition worse
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