Guest guest Posted August 6, 2002 Report Share Posted August 6, 2002 The first person that comes to mind that can help you thru experience is . I don't know if he's still around but he had a website too. I think it was sexyintime.com try looking it up he lowered both and did it without meds. Hope this helps...San Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2002 Report Share Posted August 6, 2002 Hi Elana, I'm not a docter, but here's what I know. When I had high chlolesterol, the docter gave me medication. A pill called Zocor at first, but after taking that one for a while my tryclicerides (= other fats besides cholesterol) were still high and they had to come down too. So now I'm on a different pil called Lipitor, that also works on the tryclicerides. High cholesterol is just one of the risk factors that give you a higher chance of a heart attack. Other factors are smoking, family members with heart trouble, being overweight. If they're all on yes it's wise to take action (stop smoking, take medication, loose the weight) and lower your chances. No guarantees, just higher and lower chances... best regards, Marjon blood test results - help? > I just picked up my blood test results from last week and i was > wondering if anyone on this list could help me understand the > results. i noticed that everything was in the range but my > cholesterol and tryglicerides were in the upper range. i am very > afraid of having a heart attack or developing diabetes and i wanted > to know if i continue watching what i eat and losing weight will > these numbers matter. i am losing weight slowly and i want to know if > i have enough time to fix the situation. any help and advice would be > greatly appreciated. > > thanks > elana > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2002 Report Share Posted August 6, 2002 Elana, didn't your doctor go over your results with you? They should have. I would talk to your physician about these issues. I don't want to steer you wrong because I don't know the whole picture of things. It also depends on your family history and things like that. That is why discussing it with your doctor is imperative. Hugs, Tina ) blood test results - help? I just picked up my blood test results from last week and i was wondering if anyone on this list could help me understand the results. i noticed that everything was in the range but my cholesterol and tryglicerides were in the upper range. i am very afraid of having a heart attack or developing diabetes and i wanted to know if i continue watching what i eat and losing weight will these numbers matter. i am losing weight slowly and i want to know if i have enough time to fix the situation. any help and advice would be greatly appreciated. thanks elana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2002 Report Share Posted August 6, 2002 On 8/6/02 9:15 AM, " weightlossbuddies2 " <weightlossbuddies2 > wrote: > I just picked up my blood test results from last week and i was > wondering if anyone on this list could help me understand the > results. i noticed that everything was in the range but my > cholesterol and tryglicerides were in the upper range. Diet and especially exercise have been shown to lower both. Regular exercise is the most important thing. Try to make sure you get some aerobic exercise everyday. (Walking as vigorously as you can 20 minutes every day will really help. If you are in good enough condition to exercise even more vigorously, that's good too.) Limiting saturated fat consumption is very important to lowering cholesterol. Try to follow a low fat but not ULTRA low fat diet to lower your triglycerides. You want 20% - 30% of your calories from fat. Because you are trying to reduce weight, I'd advice approximately 20% of your calories from fat. It's hard to lose weight on the higher levels. (Your triglycerides could drop on a lower fat diet-- but only if you DO lose weight. If you eat a lot of low fat pastries and cakes or fudgecycles, you can end up not losing weight. This has been shown to increase triglyceride levels.) The type of fat you eat is very important. Saturated fats are the ones you want to really eliminate if you can. How can you reduce these: Cut fat off any meats; remove chicken skin when you can. Limit your consumption fatty cheeses. That's most cheeses! But you can find reduced fat and non-fat cheese. Avoid butter, lard, and any solid shortening. Learn to read ingredients lists on pastries and cookies-- hydrogenated oil is a " bad " form of fat. Read the nutrition list and watch for fat. Avoid whole fat dairy products because dairy fat is saturated. Skim milk has no fat, 2% has a moderate amount of fat, whole milk has tons of fat. Cream is pretty much all fat. So, skim milk is the best choice! You do need to eat some fat. As much as possible, pick fats that are liquid at room temperature. Soybean oil, safflower oil, corn oil, canola oil are ok. There is evidence that monosaturated fats are the best at reducing cholesterol. When you can, pick olive oil, peanut oil or walnut oil. (These fats have strong flavors, so obviously, don't use them when you don't like the taste. I almost never use peanut oil-- but it's popular in asian food. I use lots of olive oil because it's popular in Italian, French, Spanish and Middle Easter food, which I prepare a lot.) For a while, you'll want to measure your food and tally the amount of fat you eat. You might want to get some specific recommendations here: http://www.thedietdiary.com/diet/nutrition/RestingEnergy.html Then come up with a general menu plan by going here: http://www.thedietdiary.com/diet/nutrition/NutritionLog.html (You may want something more precise after you've figured out a general meal plan though.) i am very > afraid of having a heart attack or developing diabetes and i wanted > to know if i continue watching what i eat and losing weight will > these numbers matter. Nothing is certain-- but that's what doctors advise. But exercise matters a lot too! i am losing weight slowly and i want to know if > i have enough time to fix the situation. any help and advice would be > greatly appreciated. -- lucia@... Lisle, Illinois Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 6, 2002 Report Share Posted August 6, 2002 If you continue to eat right and give your body what it needs - the numbers will adjust. The body will work right only if it has what it needs to do so. Eating carbohydrates temporarily raises blood sugar and insulin levels. The blood sugar raising effect of a food, called its glycemic index, depends on how rapidly its carbohydrate is absorbed. Many starchy foods have a glycemic index similar to (table sugar). So I would eat simple carbohydrates and sugar in moderation. A high-fiber works better to control diabetes than the diet recommended by the ADA. (So go for the complex carbohydrates). Chromium helps the body maintain normal blood sugar levels. It also plays a role in increasing HDL (good) cholesterol, while lowering total cholesterol levels. Oh - chromium picolinate is the one I meen. And it also (great side effect)...increases fat loss and promotes lean muscle tissue. So that would help with both colesteral and diebeteis risk. Hope that helps...there are alot more things that are suppost to help but this one kind of takes care of all the concerns at once - and you should really only start one thing at a time. Ang > I just picked up my blood test results from last week and i was > wondering if anyone on this list could help me understand the > results. i noticed that everything was in the range but my > cholesterol and tryglicerides were in the upper range. i am very > afraid of having a heart attack or developing diabetes and i wanted > to know if i continue watching what i eat and losing weight will > these numbers matter. i am losing weight slowly and i want to know if > i have enough time to fix the situation. any help and advice would be > greatly appreciated. > > thanks > elana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2002 Report Share Posted August 7, 2002 Hi Elana I felt the same has you when I found out about my cholesterol too. It really scared me, but I vowed to get it down to normal levels and succeeded. Just keep eating healthy and low fat, You have time to do this, so don't worry. I also had high blood pressure to make things worse, Well I am happy to say that is now normal too. Go for it, I know you can do it. Hugs Sue __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2002 Report Share Posted August 7, 2002 Hi Sue, did you have to take medicine to get your cholesterol down too? Tina ) Re: blood test results - help? Hi Elana I felt the same has you when I found out about my cholesterol too. It really scared me, but I vowed to get it down to normal levels and succeeded. Just keep eating healthy and low fat, You have time to do this, so don't worry. I also had high blood pressure to make things worse, Well I am happy to say that is now normal too. Go for it, I know you can do it. Hugs Sue Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 8, 2002 Report Share Posted August 8, 2002 Sue Thanks. I am feeling better about this whole eating healthfully thing. I have really gotten into it. last night i was checking my blood test results with my results from last year and noticed that my total cholesterol and tryglicerides went down (last year they were outside the margins - too high but this time they are in the margins but still a little high) but my glucose went up but it is still in the margin so i have to work on losing weight to help that issue. I am trying and i hope in a few months to be able to report that the numbers have gone done some more. i am going to the doctor in a week to check my blood pressure again and i hope it goes down. Elana --- sukie H wrote: > Hi Elana > > I felt the same has you when I found out about my > cholesterol too. It really scared me, but I vowed to > get it down to normal levels and succeeded. Just > keep > eating healthy and low fat, You have time to do > this, > so don't worry. I also had high > blood pressure to make things worse, Well I am happy > to say that is now normal too. > Go for it, I know you can do it. > > Hugs > Sue > > __________________________________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 8, 2002 Report Share Posted August 8, 2002 Hi Elana Funny enough I didn't find out about my high cholesterol from my doctor, it was my optician who told me, he said I should go to the doctors, but I'm obstinate or stupid, lol. Anyway I decided to get rid of it myself, and by the time I had lost most of my excess and checked it out at the dr, I had gone back to normal. It was probably a silly thing to do, anything could have happened to me. Its just that I hate taking medicines of any kind. I was just lucky I guess. Sue __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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