Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 Jim There is an ongoing study on Banaba and Sambong great potential to bring cholesterol down. Do a search at http://www.stuartXchange.com This website will show you the different Philippine herbs (we've got so many, actually in the thousands) and its uses. This website gives 250+ plants. Cholesterol bummer Had my quarterly bloodwork done and I'm a bit bummed out and annoyed. My last one was Nov 2003, and I just got a new one last week. My sugar is excellent (h1abc of 4.6!), triglycerides are real low - as can be expected on a generally low carb regimen. But my LDL is UP five points and my HDL is DOWN a couple of points. My LDL is now over 200 and HDL is below 40! Dammit! And this is with clean diet, exercise 3-5 times a week, etc. Plus I started taking coconut oil just last January. So I'm at a loss here and am this close to asking my doctor to finally prescribe a statin to bring it down. I'm trying to figure out what I did the past three months to boost the LDL and lower the HDL. The only thing I can figure out it is: a) I started taking VCO, and I cheated a few times and ate Mc's fries and ate all those darn trans-fats. Yes we have them too in the Philippines. c) It was the holiday season and my diet was horrible (more roast pig than usual!) d) I gained about 5 pounds since last November. Obviously for this group letter a) will have to ruled out as a cause because that would be blasphemous to the VCO doctrine that it doesn't raise cholesterol :-) So I will keep the VCO for now but I think I may have gone overboard with the consumption and will limit to three or four tablespoons a day, with the rest of the fats being monounsaturated virgin olive oil. However I really want to believe that VCO is not responsible (and should even lower cholesterol) so I will mainly cut out the last two possibilities (no more deep fried fast food for 3 months) and will work on losing those new 5 pounds. Will also try some anectdotal remedies for boosting like a glass of red wine a day, Niacin supplementation and will up the cardio to 30 mins, 5 times a week. Then I'll examine the results after 2-3 months. Talk about your long term studies ... am setting myself as a guinea pig here! I really want to avoid taking Lipitor but if this doesn't work, I'm biting the pill. Any tips on boosting HDL? I'm more concerned about this than anything. Yes I know I'm supposed to be a good lad and not believe the " lipid hypothesis " as Enig and Sally Fallon says but I just want to err on the safe side here! Of course any pep talk on " keeping the faith " will be appreciated. :-) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 At 05:44 AM 3/12/2004 -0800, Wilkins wrote: >Acording to the book The Water Cure by Batmangelidge(sp) , (see a link in >our links section) If you dont drink enough water you can have high >cholesterol. Thanks - actually if I drunk any more water, I'd probably be a fish. I drink a lot of it as it is. Correction to my previous post, my LDL level is actually 150 mg/dl, not 200. I was able to bring it down to 83 six months ago (naturally, without statins), so am curious as to what could have caused the spike. LDL is actually easier to bring down, it's my chronically low HDL that I've always had a hard time bringing up. Had a bit of a " crisis of faith " for a bit there - and asked what if it was the high saturated fat in coconut oil caused the spike? Ah, but no, I must stay the course and have faith in my new religion of medium chain triglycerides I'm sure that many of you embarked on the coconut oil trip with your own doubts as well thanks to years of indoctrination on the evils of saturated fat so we all need reassurance. Has anyone out there reported improved cholesterol levels due to VCO? Would like to hear of them, actual experiences are always better than drug company-sponsored studies :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 Hi Jim, > > Any tips on boosting HDL? I'm more concerned about this than anything. > > Yes I know I'm supposed to be a good lad and not believe the " lipid > hypothesis " as Enig and Sally Fallon says but I just want to err > on the safe side here! HDL cholesterol rises with HGH therapy. That's usually accomplished with amino acids. VLDL and LDL drop when dietary inulin is increased. Inulin also helps to protect the liver from oxidative stress, it corrects bowel bacteria, and has positive action on glucose and triglycerides depending on what level they're at. Not bad for a single food you can take as a supplement,and is probably low in the diet anyway. regards, Duncan Crow Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 Where's inulin naturally found if you don't want to take it as a supplement? What exactly is it BTW? Thanks Lynn > VLDL and LDL drop when dietary inulin is increased. Inulin also helps > to protect the liver from oxidative stress, it corrects bowel > bacteria, and has positive action on glucose and triglycerides > depending on what level they're at. > > Not bad for a single food you can take as a supplement,and is > probably low in the diet anyway. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 Hi, Before you get all stressed out about your cholesterol readings, read these articles. And know that stress can raise the levels. Also that there are more dangers associated with low cholesterol than high. http://www.second-opinions.co.uk/cvd_index.html I think I posted this one just the other day, but I’m posting it again just for you. http://www.second-opinions.co.uk/enig_chol.html Also, read your way through this website. It will open your eyes. http://www.thincs.org/ And above all, whatever else you do, wipe from your mind the idea of taking cholesterol lowering drugs. If you think Lipitor is the way to go these may change your mind. http://home.earthlink.net/~mbabc/statin.html http://www.medicalconsumers.org/pages/cholesterol_skeptics.html There, that should be more than enough reading to keep you out of trouble for a while. Judith Alta -----Original Message----- From: Jim Ayson [mailto:jim@...] Had my quarterly bloodwork done and I'm a bit bummed out and annoyed. My last one was Nov 2003, and I just got a new one last week. My sugar is excellent (h1abc of 4.6!), triglycerides are real low - as can be expected on a generally low carb regimen. But my LDL is UP five points and my HDL is DOWN a couple of points. My LDL is now over 200 and HDL is below 40! Dammit! And this is with clean diet, exercise 3-5 times a week, etc. Plus I started taking coconut oil just last January. So I'm at a loss here and am this close to asking my doctor to finally prescribe a statin to bring it down. I'm trying to figure out what I did the past three months to boost the LDL and lower the HDL. The only thing I can figure out it is: a) I started taking VCO, and I cheated a few times and ate Mc's fries and ate all those darn trans-fats. Yes we have them too in the Philippines. c) It was the holiday season and my diet was horrible (more roast pig than usual!) d) I gained about 5 pounds since last November. Obviously for this group letter a) will have to ruled out as a cause because that would be blasphemous to the VCO doctrine that it doesn't raise cholesterol :-) So I will keep the VCO for now but I think I may have gone overboard with the consumption and will limit to three or four tablespoons a day, with the rest of the fats being monounsaturated virgin olive oil. However I really want to believe that VCO is not responsible (and should even lower cholesterol) so I will mainly cut out the last two possibilities (no more deep fried fast food for 3 months) and will work on losing those new 5 pounds. Will also try some anectdotal remedies for boosting like a glass of red wine a day, Niacin supplementation and will up the cardio to 30 mins, 5 times a week. Then I'll examine the results after 2-3 months. Talk about your long term studies ... am setting myself as a guinea pig here! I really want to avoid taking Lipitor but if this doesn't work, I'm biting the pill. Any tips on boosting HDL? I'm more concerned about this than anything. Yes I know I'm supposed to be a good lad and not believe the " lipid hypothesis " as Enig and Sally Fallon says but I just want to err on the safe side here! Of course any pep talk on " keeping the faith " will be appreciated. :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 Hello everyone - I'm new on this list - have been lurking for a little while. Somebody on another list mentioned your list which I though sounded interesting. So it's nice to meet you all. I'll read back in the archives before I start asking questions, in case things have been discussed before - I don't want to repeat stuff. One question about inulin that was just asked I do know the answer - Inulin is a prebiotic, which is a food for probiotics - something that promotes the growth of probiotics. Fructo-oligosaccharides (FOS) are considered prebiotics. FOS is a naturally occurring sugar found in plants such as Jerusalem artichoke, garlic, banana, onion, barley, wheat, rye, tomato, cold-processed nutritional blue-green algae. I use a " friendly bacteria " supplement which has both pre and pro biotics. The list of it's ingredients are: Lactobacillus acidophilus DDS-1, Bifidobacterium bifidum, Lactobacillus bulgaricus, Lactobacillus casei, Lactobacillus plantarum, Lactobacillus salivarius, Streptococcus faecium, Streptococcus thermophilus, Acerola and Rose Hips blend, wild blue-green algae, Jerusalem Artichoke, Lipase, Amylase, Protease, and Cellulase. Carol M ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Organic, wholefood, supplements provide nutrients essential for the health of people, pets and plants. <http://www.bluegreensolutions.com> http://www.bluegreensolutions.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -----Original Message----- From: Lynn Razaitis [mailto:lyn122@...] Where's inulin naturally found if you don't want to take it as a supplement? What exactly is it BTW? Thanks Lynn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 I recently listened to a tape of Uffe Ravnskov at the last Weston A. Price conference. It was a question and answer session and people kept asking questions about lowering their LDL. Dr. Ravnskov was genuinely perplexed as to why anyone would concern themselves at all with their cholesterol levels. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 >Any tips on boosting HDL? I'm more concerned about this than anything. Are you eating fish or taking fish oil capsules regularly? Or ground flaxseeds? >Yes I know I'm supposed to be a good lad and not believe the " lipid >hypothesis " as Enig and Sally Fallon says but I just want to err >on the safe side here! > >Of course any pep talk on " keeping the faith " will be appreciated. :-) It sounds like you're doing a lot right. If your weight is at a normal level and you're feeling good, maybe those numbers are just... numbers. They're just risk factors, not causative. But if your lifestyle is healthful, in your case there may not be much risk. Just a possibility to consider. Cheers, Jeanmarie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 > I cheated a few times and ate Mc's fries and ate all those >darn trans-fats. Yes we have them too in the Philippines. That may be the problem. Jeanmarie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 Duncan, Would you be kind enough to give us foods rich in inulin, please? Thanks. Re: Cholesterol bummer Hi Jim, > > Any tips on boosting HDL? I'm more concerned about this than anything. > > Yes I know I'm supposed to be a good lad and not believe the " lipid > hypothesis " as Enig and Sally Fallon says but I just want to err > on the safe side here! HDL cholesterol rises with HGH therapy. That's usually accomplished with amino acids. VLDL and LDL drop when dietary inulin is increased. Inulin also helps to protect the liver from oxidative stress, it corrects bowel bacteria, and has positive action on glucose and triglycerides depending on what level they're at. Not bad for a single food you can take as a supplement,and is probably low in the diet anyway. regards, Duncan Crow ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 Once a month or even once a week should not destroy a good eating plan. My question would be: " Have you eliminated all sugars and other refined, adulterated foods? " . Best Regards, Lorenzo Oil $Money is supporting terrorism, So We must stop buying gasoline or find another way to shut down Oil $Money from Terrorists. Your choice. Re: Cholesterol bummer > I cheated a few times and ate Mc's fries and ate all those >darn trans-fats. Yes we have them too in the Philippines. That may be the problem. Jeanmarie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 Have you looked at homocysteine? Best Regards, Lorenzo Oil $Money is supporting terrorism, So We must stop buying gasoline or find another way to shut down Oil $Money from Terrorists. Your choice. Re: Cholesterol bummer >Any tips on boosting HDL? I'm more concerned about this than anything. Are you eating fish or taking fish oil capsules regularly? Or ground flaxseeds? >Yes I know I'm supposed to be a good lad and not believe the " lipid >hypothesis " as Enig and Sally Fallon says but I just want to err >on the safe side here! > >Of course any pep talk on " keeping the faith " will be appreciated. :-) It sounds like you're doing a lot right. If your weight is at a normal level and you're feeling good, maybe those numbers are just... numbers. They're just risk factors, not causative. But if your lifestyle is healthful, in your case there may not be much risk. Just a possibility to consider. Cheers, Jeanmarie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 12, 2004 Report Share Posted March 12, 2004 Lorenzo, your posts are right up my alley! What is hardest to do, the one thing we do not want to do, spend so much money in order to avoid doing (maybe this supplement, or that vitamin, or another herb?), is getting refined sugar and white flour out of our diet. It is the simplest, and the hardest thing to do. And the most effective path to good health. Still working on it, -Blair > Once a month or even once a week should not destroy a good eating plan. > > My question would be: " Have you eliminated all sugars and other refined, > adulterated foods? " . > > Best Regards, > > Lorenzo > > Oil $Money is supporting terrorism, So We must stop buying gasoline or find > another way to shut down Oil $Money from Terrorists. Your choice. > > > Re: Cholesterol bummer > > > > > I cheated a few times and ate Mc's fries and ate all those > >darn trans-fats. Yes we have them too in the Philippines. > > That may be the problem. > > Jeanmarie > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 13, 2004 Report Share Posted March 13, 2004 I'm not Duncan, but I thought I already answered this question - I'm fairly new here, and maybe my post didn't go through for some reason, so here's the list again - Jerusalem artichoke, garlic, banana, onion, barley, asparagus, wheat, rye, tomato, cold-processed nutritional blue-green algae. Actually, it's estimated that about 1/3 of the earth's vegetation contains inulin. And it's also used as an isolated ingredient in a lot of processed foods because of the health benefits. But I would stay away from anything that contains isolated nutrients - not just the processed isolated inulin, but anything isolated. They put inulin in processed foods such as cereal, ice cream, yogurt, beverages. That's simply not natrual and not how it's found in nature. Stay away from anything processed. Carol M ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Organic, wholefood, supplements provide nutrients essential for the health of people, pets and plants. <http://www.bluegreensolutions.com> http://www.bluegreensolutions.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -----Original Message----- From: pbanagal [mailto:pbanagal@...] Duncan, Would you be kind enough to give us foods rich in inulin, please? Thanks. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 13, 2004 Report Share Posted March 13, 2004 > > Duncan, > > Would you be kind enough to give us foods rich in inulin, please? > > Thanks. > > Hi , All vegetation contains inulin; it's the second most common carbohydrate after starch. What you're looking for are sources HIGH in inulin, for even wheat and bananas contain some, but you couldn't eat enough to get a decent dose if you wanted to. A bunch of food sources of inulin have been analysed and compiled into two separate tables in the scientific material on my web site; one is on the inulin/bowel dysbiosis page, and the other is in " Inulin: A Comprehensive Scientific Review " linked from that page. A valuable resource, I have the most complete site on this general subject anywhere. Not sure if I can post the site myself because it's my own commercial site (I'm the only retail source for sugar-free inulin), but I am sure someone else can post the link here. regards, Duncan Crow Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 2004 Report Share Posted March 14, 2004 > Actually, it's estimated that about 1/3 of the earth's vegetation > contains inulin. And it's also used as an isolated ingredient in a > lot of processed foods because of the health benefits. But I would > stay away from anything that contains isolated nutrients - not just > the processed isolated inulin, but anything isolated. They put inulin > in processed foods such as cereal, ice cream, yogurt, beverages. > That's simply not natrual and not how it's found in nature. Stay away > from anything processed. > > Carol M Carol, I can understand why you are cautious about using what you perceive is an isolated nutrient, based on other examples. But you worded very well that common misconception about a inulin. It's not really an isolated nutrient; it's a water extraction. Your concern in this respect is like saying you should be wary of re-using your boiled potato or vegetable water in a soup. Incidentally, a couple of the examples you gave of inulin-containing foods, such as the wheat and the bananas, contain vastly more problematic starches etc. than they do inulin, and as with a lot of foods, you couldn't eat enough to achieve therapeutic inulin levels. You could however conceivably get enough in chicory and dandelion root, garlic, onions, murnong, yacon, jicama, camas lily, jerusalem artichoke root, and dandelion greens, but because it's dose- dependent, even with those natural high-inulin sources you'd need to eat several servings per day, as you can see from the chart compiled from several studies in " Inulin: A Comprehensive Scientific Review " on my website, which specifies the relative concentration of inulin in selected foods. Where the real usefulness of inulin powder itself comes into play relates to the 12-15 grams daily requirement. Also, in people with existing bowel problems, candida, diabetes, crohn's colitis and IBS, who shouldn't have the sugar component, sugar free inulin can be used at least in the short term to good, often spectacular, effect for restoring bowel bacteria to normal. This of course would be given at the same time as coconut oil is doing its part to reduce the numbers of pathogenic bacteria in the colon and throughout the body. regards, Duncan Crow Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2004 Report Share Posted March 23, 2004 > Cholesterol bummer > > > Had my quarterly bloodwork done and I'm a bit bummed out and annoyed. > My last one was Nov 2003, and I just got a new one last week. My > sugar is excellent (h1abc of 4.6!), triglycerides are real low - as > can be expected on a generally low carb regimen. But my LDL is UP > five points and my HDL is DOWN a couple of points. My LDL is now over > 200 and HDL is below 40! Dammit! And this is with clean diet, > exercise 3-5 times a week, etc. Plus I started taking coconut oil > just last January. > > So I'm at a loss here and am this close to asking my doctor to > finally prescribe a statin to bring it down. You might want to check this out before starting any statin drugs: http://www.livejournal.com/users/doorinward/358901.html Alobar Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 At 06:37 PM 3/23/2004 -0600, Alobar wrote: > You might want to check this out before starting any statin >drugs: >http://www.livejournal.com/users/doorinward/358901.html When I tried that link - I got a dead link - but I get the picture, Alobar. > ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- jim ayson / jim@... / www.philmusic.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 Alobar, I tried to access the website you gave, and got 'unauthorized' message. I would like to read this; I wonder if you could copy/paste on this board, or send it to me? Thanks in advance, -Blair p.s. Jim - You say low carb, that's good, but are you eating your vegetables? Not some freeze-dried protein isolate, I hope? REAL food? -should have been a Jewish mama :-), -Blair > > > Cholesterol bummer > > > > > > Had my quarterly bloodwork done and I'm a bit bummed out and > annoyed. > > My last one was Nov 2003, and I just got a new one last week. My > > sugar is excellent (h1abc of 4.6!), triglycerides are real low - > as > > can be expected on a generally low carb regimen. But my LDL is UP > > five points and my HDL is DOWN a couple of points. My LDL is now > over > > 200 and HDL is below 40! Dammit! And this is with clean diet, > > exercise 3-5 times a week, etc. Plus I started taking coconut oil > > just last January. > > > > So I'm at a loss here and am this close to asking my doctor to > > finally prescribe a statin to bring it down. > > > You might want to check this out before starting any statin > drugs: > http://www.livejournal.com/users/doorinward/358901.html > > Alobar Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 >Alobar, >I tried to access the website you gave, and got 'unauthorized' >message. I would like to read this; I wonder if you could >copy/paste on this board, or send it to me? >Thanks in advance, >-Blair I had the same experience. Jeanmarie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 Re: Cholesterol bummer > >Alobar, > >I tried to access the website you gave, and got 'unauthorized' > >message. I would like to read this; I wonder if you could > >copy/paste on this board, or send it to me? > >Thanks in advance, > >-Blair > > I had the same experience. > Jeanmarie See the big post (46 KB) I made about 12 hours ago with the same subject line as the post you made. Alobar Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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