Guest guest Posted December 10, 2006 Report Share Posted December 10, 2006 On Dec 9, 2006, at 10:55 AM, citpeks wrote: > Similarly, if your diet is high in saturated fats, your cholesterol > will be high. You need to reduce the amount of saturated fats, and > increase the amount of polyunsaturated in your diet. I have > summarized this information in my three pages on cholesterol: > > http://www.scientificpsychic.com/health/cholesterol.html > > It is time to review and revise your diet. Something like cutting > back on the " healthy " olive oil and replacing it with a high > polyunsaturated oil like grape seed oil, and adding one tablespoon of > flax seed oil per day to your diet is generally all it takes to > normalize your cholesterol. Those pages (and many others) on your website are very informative. One small quibble: judging from the profiles of edible oils as graphed on the Manitoba Harvest website, it looks like safflower oil would be a slightly better choice than grapeseed oil for polyunsaturated fats with minimal saturated fats. (Also more widely available, at least in my experience.) Not so? L Cook Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 10, 2006 Report Share Posted December 10, 2006 Hi All, See: 25 Mar 1998 Nutrient Intake Profile for Alan Pater. Your Average Fats, Protein, Carbohydrate, Fiber, and Cholesterol Intake ================================================== Daily Intake Reference Total fat (% calories) 11.5 Less than 30% Saturated fat (% calories) 3.7 Less than 10% Monounsaturated fat (% calories) 3.4 Polyunsaturated fat (% calories) 2.6 6.8 g Protein (% calories) 17.7 55 g Total carbohydrate (% calories) 74.3 Greater than 55% Total sugar (% calories) 4.2 Less than 10% Dietary fiber (g) 23.3 25 or more g/day Dietary cholesterol (mg) 47.9 Less than 300 mg/day Blood total cholesterol 3.05 mM, reference range 4.0-6.4 mM --- citpeks <citpeks@...> wrote: > There are three main causes of high cholesterol: 2) high > carbohydrate, low-fat diet > > High carbohydrate, low-fat diets increase > cholesterol because > carbohydrates get metabolized to palmitate (C16:0) > which is a > saturated fatty acid that can increase cholesterol. -- Al Pater, PhD; email: Alpater@... ________________________________________________________________________________\ ____ Want to start your own business? Learn how on Small Business. http://smallbusiness./r-index Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2006 Report Share Posted December 11, 2006 > There are three main causes of high cholesterol: 1) > familial > hypercholesterolemia which is fairly rare (~1/500 > people), 2) high > carbohydrate, low-fat diet, and 3) diet deficient in > essential > omega-6, omega-3 fatty acids. There is no evidence that a diet based on whole natural foods that is low in fat and high in carb and fiber raises cholesterol. In fact, just the opposite. The only diet ever proven to reverse heart disease in a clinical trial was a low fat high carb diet (ornish, pritikin). Low fat high carb diets that are low in fiber and also high in sugar, and white flour, and full of hydrogenated fats, and saturated fat, will raise cholesterol. The typical low fat high carb diet in american is 12% saturated fat. Such diets will raise cholesterol Also, diets high in saturated fat, cholesterol, hydrogenated fats, tropical oils and trans fat, can also raise cholesterol Regards Jeff Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2006 Report Share Posted December 11, 2006 > It's beginning to sound to me like the ideal dietary > protein/fat/carbohydrate ratio should be something > like: > > 10%/15%/75% where the fat percentage varies from > 10-20% and the > carbohydrate ratio would then vary from 70-80%. If I was pressed to give percentages, I would say Fat 10-20% (maybe 25% in a rare case) Protein 10-20% (maybe 25% again in a rare case) Carb 60-80% But, as percentages of macronutrients are not our primary need, focusing on them, and trying to hit some sort of " ideal " can be misleading. Our primary need is for essential nutrients, vitamins, minerals etc.. and we should design a diet where we meet these through whole foods, and let the percentages fall where they would. And when we do, we will see that the most nutrient dense diet, with the most food for the least calories, and the highest level of satiety, will fall into those ranges. I have left a challenge on this board now for a few years for anyone to design a diet that is CR and hit all the RDAs for all known nutrients, and be over 25% fat. So far, no one has posted one. Regards Jeff Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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