Saw article this morning. Can't help but be sceptical.http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/...led-biggest-breakthrough-fight-against-heart/
"the biggest breakthrough since statins" .... not the most suitable accolade...
I caught the tail end of that piece and was gratified to hear that this 'breakthrough' should be taken with a pinch of salt.Cardiologist on Radio 4 news just now reaffirming lifestyle as the key and, in many respects, too many drugs and reliance on them the problem. Statins have "..marginal effect on those already with heart disease...".
Wow so for those without heart disease completely unnecessary perhaps?Statins have "..marginal effect on those already with heart disease...".
Massive world overpopulation and they are constantly trying to make
people live longer.
Hey @Guzzler take your GP this one...I caught the tail end of that piece and was gratified to hear that this 'breakthrough' should be taken with a pinch of salt.
I am now armed when my gp insists (again) that I take statins.
Indeed and as we know that the LCHF/Ketogenic diet reduces inflammation then....The real news is that this is the first time that decreasing inflammatory has been proven in a double blind clinical trial to reduce risk, hence opening up new research directions.
Woohoo! I am going to live forever. Sat Fat here I come.Hey @Guzzler take your GP this one...
http://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/for-those-worried-about-cholesterol-levels.125631/
At least they state that half of all people who have heart attacks do not have high cholesterol.
While we're on cholesterol, apologies for hijacking, I'm attaching a graph that was put together by the British Heart Foundation and the World Health Organisation. It's All Cause Mortality against Total Cholesterol. The dotted red line is heart disease. The cholesterol units are in Mg/Dl which I converted to mmol/l. the numbers we're more familiar with in the UK. I've added the conversions to the chart at the bottom, bit cluttered but I tried.
If you can open it up and enlarge it (my PDF program lets me do that), have a look at bottom right, just above 230/5.4978 and it says Cardiovascular diseases and total cholesterol are weakly related.
It's dated 2002 but I've seen a much later version which I can't find, it was post 2010.
I managed to post this in the wrong place, sorry.
Thank you David, much appreciated.
I am now armed when my gp insists (again) that I take statins.
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