The Western world is under attack from a disease of our own making! Health officials in every Western country are ringing the warning bells about general public levels of obesity, high blood pressure and cholesterol. The main culprits of this are said to be over eating, eating junk food and not exercising sufficiently.
At one time, not so long ago, the majority of the sufferers of these issues were middle-aged Americans. That spread to middle-aged Europeans. Then to American children and now it is spreading to European children. None of the warnings concerning eating too much junk food and not exercising enough seem to be having any effect at all.
All of these three conditions are related and that is why heart disease is the primary killer of adults in the West. Cholesterol plays a big part in these conditions. However, not all cholesterol is bad. LDL cholesterol is often called the 'bad cholesterol' and HDL is called the 'good cholesterol', because it helps mop up LDL.
Small amounts of cholesterol are also necessary for the production of vitamin D and bile salts and it is also functional in the balancing of hormones particularly in women. However, LDL cholesterol occasionally adheres to the walls of the arteries and if it is permitted to mount up too much, can block them.
If the arteries get clogged, the heart will have to pump harder to get enough blood to where it is required and this can lead to the first stages of high blood pressure.
The best manner to be rid of excess LDL is to have high levels of HDL, because HDL encapsulates LDL and takes it back to the liver where it is treated and excreted. HDL cholesterol can be consumed by eating nuts, fish, fresh fruit and vegetables, soya and remarkable spreads that were designed to lower LDL.
However, the best manner of reducing LDL is by not eating it in the first instance. LDL is most prevalent in saturated fats and hydrogenated trans fats. Saturated fats are mostly in red meat and full-fat dairy products like milk, cream, butter and cheese. Trans fats are mostly in junk foodstuffs like potato crisps, potato chips, pies, pasties, hamburgers and hot dogs. Cut these out and that is half the battle for a lot of people.
Replace the red meat in your diet with soya products like tofu, of which 25% grammes a day is said to be able to reduce bad cholesterol by 15-30%. Walnuts and almonds have a comparable reputation as do olive oil and rolled oats.
In fact, all grains, pulses and beans are good in the fight against LDL. In general, the foods that will help you are those that contain lots of fibre and roughage; fresh is better than tinned (which will contain a preservative such as salt); and white meat or fish is better than red meat like beef and pork.
At one time, not so long ago, the majority of the sufferers of these issues were middle-aged Americans. That spread to middle-aged Europeans. Then to American children and now it is spreading to European children. None of the warnings concerning eating too much junk food and not exercising enough seem to be having any effect at all.
All of these three conditions are related and that is why heart disease is the primary killer of adults in the West. Cholesterol plays a big part in these conditions. However, not all cholesterol is bad. LDL cholesterol is often called the 'bad cholesterol' and HDL is called the 'good cholesterol', because it helps mop up LDL.
Small amounts of cholesterol are also necessary for the production of vitamin D and bile salts and it is also functional in the balancing of hormones particularly in women. However, LDL cholesterol occasionally adheres to the walls of the arteries and if it is permitted to mount up too much, can block them.
If the arteries get clogged, the heart will have to pump harder to get enough blood to where it is required and this can lead to the first stages of high blood pressure.
The best manner to be rid of excess LDL is to have high levels of HDL, because HDL encapsulates LDL and takes it back to the liver where it is treated and excreted. HDL cholesterol can be consumed by eating nuts, fish, fresh fruit and vegetables, soya and remarkable spreads that were designed to lower LDL.
However, the best manner of reducing LDL is by not eating it in the first instance. LDL is most prevalent in saturated fats and hydrogenated trans fats. Saturated fats are mostly in red meat and full-fat dairy products like milk, cream, butter and cheese. Trans fats are mostly in junk foodstuffs like potato crisps, potato chips, pies, pasties, hamburgers and hot dogs. Cut these out and that is half the battle for a lot of people.
Replace the red meat in your diet with soya products like tofu, of which 25% grammes a day is said to be able to reduce bad cholesterol by 15-30%. Walnuts and almonds have a comparable reputation as do olive oil and rolled oats.
In fact, all grains, pulses and beans are good in the fight against LDL. In general, the foods that will help you are those that contain lots of fibre and roughage; fresh is better than tinned (which will contain a preservative such as salt); and white meat or fish is better than red meat like beef and pork.
About the Author:
Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on several subjects, but is now concerned with low cholesterol diet recipes. If you want to know more, please visit our web site at What Foods Lower Cholesterol?
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