Guest guest Posted April 11, 2005 Report Share Posted April 11, 2005 My understanding is that cholesterol levels in the blood are not in and of themselves harmful or dangerous, but are a surrogate marker for a system that is not functioning correctly in the body. By using medications that lower cholesterol but do not address the underlying metabolic problem (be it diet, genetics, disease, or anything else), we are cutting the wire to the " check engine " light and figuring we fixed our car. Now, are there levels of serum cholesterol that in and of themselves cause harm, rather than being a " red flag " for imbalance in a body system? That, I'm afraid I don't know. Perhaps. Probably, even. Also, total cholesterol, even within the " cholesterol is bad " paradigm, is not meaningful, because (again, within that paradigm) they want " bad " cholesterol to be low and " good " cholesterol to be high. Do you know the breakdown on the numbers? Also, what are her triglycerides? That measure really is much more predictive of health problems, and responds VERY well to lifestyle changes. Lots of folks on my Atkins lists have had their " bad " cholesterol numbers plummet and triglycerides go down from sky-high to completely normal, often before they'd even lost much weight at all. I suspect that eating low carb and high fat is the best way to favorably influence serum lipids. I still don't know if, when it comes to cholesterol, that matters, unless you're also favorably influencing the underlying broken system. Christie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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