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I've been doing well on SCD, thankfully, but my diet has been limited and I am

slowly building it back up. I was always a really healthy eater, so it upset me

to have GI issues- as I was so fanatical about eating healthy foods. I used to

eat a lot of " healthy " (but not SCD legal) whole grains, oatmeal and so on,.

I just recently had a checkup, and my cholesterol has gone up-not enough for

medication thankfully, but I want to avoid that if possible. The culprits?

Probably eggs, cheese, and lots of SCD yogurt made with 2% milk. I don't eat a

lot of red meat, mostly fish and chicken. It seems that on SCD we don't have

many carb culprits, but there are stil fats.

I also don't want to eliminate more foods than I already have. Any advice? I

guess the yogurt can be made with 1% milk ( skim might be yukky ), eat less of

it and go up on cooked veggies? I'm not ready for raw veggies yet. I am also

exercising more, and I'm not overweight, don't smoke-no caffeine, no other " risk

factors " that I know of.

PJ

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PJ

I came across several articles in my nutrition research over the past five years that indicated our cholesterol levels often fluctuate dramatically, usually going high, during healing phases. There is also a lot of information available discussing "good" fats vs "bad" fats. SCD provides us with "good" fats, and avoids most of the bad.

That has been my experience, anyway, and I don't have an IBD. My cholesterol levels have settled down since my 3rd year on SCD, and they are quite low. My doctors are always impressed that I have such good levels "at your age" and with my family medical history.

With cholesterol levels, like most lab results, it is usually best to consider multiple high (or low) readings before taking action. It is normal to have fluctuations.

Kim M.

SCD 5 years

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I'm in the same situation. I've had the same slightly high cholesterol levels before and after SCD, so mine hasn't varied much.  I use Organic Valley fat free milk for my yogurt. The texture is o.k., but I drip my yogurt anyway, so it's not an issue.  I'm also going to eliminate cheese, except on special occasions. I cook with half egg whites and half regular eggs in most recipes.  I find that a regular egg binds the ingredients better.

I've eliminated coconut, although I love it, and there's a lot of debate about the nature of its saturated fats.  I suspect if I could lose the 20 pounds I need to, my levels might go down more.  

--

I've been doing well on SCD, thankfully, but my diet has been limited and I am slowly building it back up. I was always a really healthy eater, so it upset me to have GI issues- as I was so fanatical about eating healthy foods. I used to eat a lot of " healthy " (but not SCD legal) whole grains, oatmeal and so on,.

I just recently had a checkup, and my cholesterol has gone up-not enough for medication thankfully, but I want to avoid that if possible. The culprits? Probably eggs, cheese, and lots of SCD yogurt made with 2% milk. I don't eat a lot of red meat, mostly fish and chicken. It seems that on SCD we don't have many carb culprits, but there are stil fats.

I also don't want to eliminate more foods than I already have. Any advice? I guess the yogurt can be made with 1% milk ( skim might be yukky ), eat less of it and go up on cooked veggies? I'm not ready for raw veggies yet. I am also exercising more, and I'm not overweight, don't smoke-no caffeine, no other " risk factors " that I know of.

PJ

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Thanks for all the replies. Yes, I am going to modify the yogurt- I drip the

yogurt too which would make fat free more palatable, use more egg whites.I have

also used coconut oil which I will cut back on as well.

My doc will recheck probably in 6 months so hopefully the changes will show

improvement.

Thanks,

PJ

>

> >

> >

> > I've been doing well on SCD, thankfully, but my diet has been limited and I

> > am slowly building it back up. I was always a really healthy eater, so it

> > upset me to have GI issues- as I was so fanatical about eating healthy

> > foods. I used to eat a lot of " healthy " (but not SCD legal) whole grains,

> > oatmeal and so on,.

> >

> > I just recently had a checkup, and my cholesterol has gone up-not enough

> > for medication thankfully, but I want to avoid that if possible. The

> > culprits? Probably eggs, cheese, and lots of SCD yogurt made with 2% milk. I

> > don't eat a lot of red meat, mostly fish and chicken. It seems that on SCD

> > we don't have many carb culprits, but there are stil fats.

> >

> > I also don't want to eliminate more foods than I already have. Any advice?

> > I guess the yogurt can be made with 1% milk ( skim might be yukky ), eat

> > less of it and go up on cooked veggies? I'm not ready for raw veggies yet. I

> > am also exercising more, and I'm not overweight, don't smoke-no caffeine, no

> > other " risk factors " that I know of.

> >

> > PJ

> >

> >

> >

>

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> Thanks for all the replies. Yes, I am going to modify the yogurt- I

> drip the yogurt too which would make fat free more palatable, use

> more egg whites.I have also used coconut oil which I will cut back

> on as well.

You are aware of the health benefits of coconut oil - right - before

you stop eating it - that it is a great natural anti-inflammatory, and

an anti-fungal. Two things that are helpful with your disease.

You are also aware of the theory in which the presence of disease

raises cholesterol levels as - among others - Marilyn reported as

one of the first symptoms when she got cancer. She asked her

doctor about it, he threw it back at her - and blamed it on her

food intake - instead of correlating it to her general health and

checking for other health issues. Just another way that conventional

medicine is out of touch with health issues.

And the whole " fat is evil - ban fat from the diet " trend in modern

years has done nothing so much as help create the modern

obesity disaster. Traditional fats are good for you - that's

why people have eaten them for millenia.

Mara

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Schneider wrote:

I'm in the same situation. I've had the same slightly high

cholesterol levels before and after SCD, so mine hasn't varied much. I

use Organic Valley fat free milk for my yogurt. The texture is o.k.,

but I drip my yogurt anyway, so it's not an issue. I'm also going to

eliminate cheese, except on special occasions. I cook with half egg

whites and half regular eggs in most recipes. I find that a regular

egg binds the ingredients better.

I've eliminated coconut, although I love it, and there's a lot

of debate about the nature of its saturated fats. I suspect if I could

lose the 20 pounds I need to, my levels might go down more.

--

On Sun, May 17, 2009 at 2:23 PM, smdsmom2008 <smdsmom2008 (AT) yahoo (DOT) com>

wrote:

I just recently had a checkup, and my cholesterol has gone

up-not enough for medication thankfully, but I want to avoid that if

possible. The culprits? Probably eggs, cheese, and lots of SCD yogurt

made with 2% milk. I don't eat a lot of red meat, mostly fish and

chicken. It seems that on SCD we don't have many carb culprits, but

there are stil fats.

I also don't want to eliminate more foods than I already have. Any

advice? I guess the yogurt can be made with 1% milk ( skim might be

yukky ), eat less of it and go up on cooked veggies? I'm not ready for

raw veggies yet. I am also exercising more, and I'm not overweight,

don't smoke-no caffeine, no other "risk factors" that I know of.

PJ

I've been doing well on SCD, thankfully, but my diet has been limited

and I am slowly building it back up. I was always a really healthy

eater, so it upset me to have GI issues- as I was so fanatical about

eating healthy foods. I used to eat a lot of "healthy"(but not SCD

legal) whole grains, oatmeal and so on,.

I've long wondered about the seemingly extreme emphasis on cholesterol,

and doctors essentially forcing people to take drugs to lower it. I

intuitively decided it was bunk. Scientifically, it is. I'm reading

"Good Calories, Bad Calories," whose author documents very carefully

how we got into the bizarre situation of the medical establishment

promoting low-fat (especially avoiding red meat and saturated

fats)/high-carb diets, and assuming that eating low cholesterol foods

equals low blood cholesterol levels when the scientific evidence shows

no support for those assumptions, and in fact shows that low-fat diets

are unhealthy and eating low cholesterol foods has no healthy impact on

blood cholesterol levels. Eggs are good for you, so is whole milk, so

is meat. Personally, I'd forget about cholesterol if I were you. It

has no real relevance to whether you're going to be healthy or not.

n

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You know, I agree with this. My cholesterol levels are only a " tad " above the

normal range. Not only this, but the medically acceptable ranges of " normal "

have changed over the years- they are narrower which will make more people

" abnormal " .

I appreciate that my doctor is vigilant, but it becomes a scary experience to

have everything picked apart. I've already been very vigilant about what I eat.

I think loading up on fast food, cokes, and french fries will get anyone in

trouble over time, but some recommendations are strange and the recommendations

keep changing. I just want to be sure I don't overdo it on some SCD legal but

high fat foods. I can deal with fat free yogurt, but I tend to agree with you.

PJ

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Thanks for the tip about the coconut oil, and G-d willing, I'm healthy as he did

give me a pretty complete check over. :)

PJ

>

> > Thanks for all the replies. Yes, I am going to modify the yogurt- I

> > drip the yogurt too which would make fat free more palatable, use

> > more egg whites.I have also used coconut oil which I will cut back

> > on as well.

>

>

> You are aware of the health benefits of coconut oil - right - before

> you stop eating it - that it is a great natural anti-inflammatory, and

> an anti-fungal. Two things that are helpful with your disease.

>

> You are also aware of the theory in which the presence of disease

> raises cholesterol levels as - among others - Marilyn reported as

> one of the first symptoms when she got cancer. She asked her

> doctor about it, he threw it back at her - and blamed it on her

> food intake - instead of correlating it to her general health and

> checking for other health issues. Just another way that conventional

> medicine is out of touch with health issues.

>

> And the whole " fat is evil - ban fat from the diet " trend in modern

> years has done nothing so much as help create the modern

> obesity disaster. Traditional fats are good for you - that's

> why people have eaten them for millenia.

>

>

> Mara

>

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I make all these modifications because I'm trying to avoid going on statins, and I'm really borderline.I do eat " good " fats though: olive oil, walnut oil, avocado, etc. and eat red meat occasionally.

--

Schneider wrote:

I'm in the same situation. I've had the same slightly high

cholesterol levels before and after SCD, so mine hasn't varied much.  I

use Organic Valley fat free milk for my yogurt. The texture is o.k.,

but I drip my yogurt anyway, so it's not an issue.  I'm also going to

eliminate cheese, except on special occasions. I cook with half egg

whites and half regular eggs in most recipes.  I find that a regular

egg binds the ingredients better.

I've eliminated coconut, although I love it, and there's a lot

of debate about the nature of its saturated fats.  I suspect if I could

lose the 20 pounds I need to, my levels might go down more.  

--

On Sun, May 17, 2009 at 2:23 PM, smdsmom2008

wrote:

I just recently had a checkup, and my cholesterol has gone

up-not enough for medication thankfully, but I want to avoid that if

possible. The culprits? Probably eggs, cheese, and lots of SCD yogurt

made with 2% milk. I don't eat a lot of red meat, mostly fish and

chicken. It seems that on SCD we don't have many carb culprits, but

there are stil fats.

I also don't want to eliminate more foods than I already have. Any

advice? I guess the yogurt can be made with 1% milk ( skim might be

yukky ), eat less of it and go up on cooked veggies? I'm not ready for

raw veggies yet. I am also exercising more, and I'm not overweight,

don't smoke-no caffeine, no other " risk factors " that I know of.

PJ

I've been doing well on SCD, thankfully, but my diet has been limited

and I am slowly building it back up. I was always a really healthy

eater, so it upset me to have GI issues- as I was so fanatical about

eating healthy foods. I used to eat a lot of " healthy " (but not SCD

legal) whole grains, oatmeal and so on,.

I've long wondered about the seemingly extreme emphasis on cholesterol,

and doctors essentially forcing people to take drugs to lower it. I

intuitively decided it was bunk. Scientifically, it is. I'm reading

" Good Calories, Bad Calories, " whose author documents very carefully

how we got into the bizarre situation of the medical establishment

promoting low-fat (especially avoiding red meat and saturated

fats)/high-carb diets, and assuming that eating low cholesterol foods

equals low blood cholesterol levels  when the scientific evidence shows

no support for those assumptions, and in fact shows that low-fat diets

are unhealthy and eating low cholesterol foods has no healthy impact on

blood cholesterol levels.  Eggs are good for you, so is whole milk, so

is meat.  Personally, I'd forget about cholesterol if I were you. It

has no real relevance  to  whether you're going to be healthy or not. 

n

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I agree. I looked at my last year's cholesterol, and it's not a big difference,

but I also was eating differently- way more grains and raw veggies-never any

cheese or butter or high fat dairy ( and I sincerely hope to get into raw

fruit/veggies again one day). My doc has a really low threshold for using

statins, and I really don't want to go there either. I'm not in the high risk

category with cholesterol either thankfully, and I agree that some fats are good

fats, but I am going to modify some because I don't want him giving me any drugs

I could avoid.

I think it's awesome about your colonoscopy after 9 months of SCD, cholesterol

is minor compared to results like that :)

PJ

> >

> >> I just recently had a checkup, and my cholesterol has gone up-not

> >> enough for medication thankfully, but I want to avoid that if possible. The

> >> culprits? Probably eggs, cheese, and lots of SCD yogurt made with 2% milk.

I

> >> don't eat a lot of red meat, mostly fish and chicken. It seems that on SCD

> >> we don't have many carb culprits, but there are stil fats.

> >>

> >> I also don't want to eliminate more foods than I already have. Any advice?

> >> I guess the yogurt can be made with 1% milk ( skim might be yukky ), eat

> >> less of it and go up on cooked veggies? I'm not ready for raw veggies yet.

I

> >> am also exercising more, and I'm not overweight, don't smoke-no caffeine,

no

> >> other " risk factors " that I know of.

> >>

> >> PJ

> >> I've been doing well on SCD, thankfully, but my diet has been limited and

> >> I am slowly building it back up. I was always a really healthy eater, so it

> >> upset me to have GI issues- as I was so fanatical about eating healthy

> >> foods. I used to eat a lot of " healthy " (but not SCD legal) whole grains,

> >> oatmeal and so on,.

> >>

> > I've long wondered about the seemingly extreme emphasis on cholesterol,

> > and doctors essentially forcing people to take drugs to lower it. I

> > intuitively decided it was bunk. Scientifically, it is. I'm reading " Good

> > Calories, Bad Calories, " whose author documents very carefully how we got

> > into the bizarre situation of the medical establishment promoting low-fat

> > (especially avoiding red meat and saturated fats)/high-carb diets, and

> > assuming that eating low cholesterol foods equals low blood cholesterol

> > levels when the scientific evidence shows no support for those assumptions,

> > and in fact shows that low-fat diets are unhealthy and eating low

> > cholesterol foods has no healthy impact on blood cholesterol levels. Eggs

> > are good for you, so is whole milk, so is meat. Personally, I'd forget

> > about cholesterol if I were you. It has no real relevance to whether

> > you're going to be healthy or not.

> >

> >

> >

> > n

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

>

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Thanks. I'm truly grateful for the diet. I think the Canasa helped as well, although I seem to be having some reaction to it, so I think my GI is looking at other options. Luckily, though, I'm still on the mild meds five years after being first diagnosed. I'm not sure that would be the case without the diet.

--

I agree. I looked at my last year's cholesterol, and it's not a big difference, but I also was eating differently- way more grains and raw veggies-never any cheese or butter or high fat dairy ( and I sincerely hope to get into raw fruit/veggies again one day). My doc has a really low threshold for using statins, and I really don't want to go there either. I'm not in the high risk category with cholesterol either thankfully, and I agree that some fats are good fats, but I am going to modify some because I don't want him giving me any drugs I could avoid.

I think it's awesome about your colonoscopy after 9 months of SCD, cholesterol is minor compared to results like that :)

PJ

> >

> >> I just recently had a checkup, and my cholesterol has gone up-not

> >> enough for medication thankfully, but I want to avoid that if possible. The

> >> culprits? Probably eggs, cheese, and lots of SCD yogurt made with 2% milk. I

> >> don't eat a lot of red meat, mostly fish and chicken. It seems that on SCD

> >> we don't have many carb culprits, but there are stil fats.

> >>

> >> I also don't want to eliminate more foods than I already have. Any advice?

> >> I guess the yogurt can be made with 1% milk ( skim might be yukky ), eat

> >> less of it and go up on cooked veggies? I'm not ready for raw veggies yet. I

> >> am also exercising more, and I'm not overweight, don't smoke-no caffeine, no

> >> other " risk factors " that I know of.

> >>

> >> PJ

> >> I've been doing well on SCD, thankfully, but my diet has been limited and

> >> I am slowly building it back up. I was always a really healthy eater, so it

> >> upset me to have GI issues- as I was so fanatical about eating healthy

> >> foods. I used to eat a lot of " healthy " (but not SCD legal) whole grains,

> >> oatmeal and so on,.

> >>

> > I've long wondered about the seemingly extreme emphasis on cholesterol,

> > and doctors essentially forcing people to take drugs to lower it. I

> > intuitively decided it was bunk. Scientifically, it is. I'm reading " Good

> > Calories, Bad Calories, " whose author documents very carefully how we got

> > into the bizarre situation of the medical establishment promoting low-fat

> > (especially avoiding red meat and saturated fats)/high-carb diets, and

> > assuming that eating low cholesterol foods equals low blood cholesterol

> > levels when the scientific evidence shows no support for those assumptions,

> > and in fact shows that low-fat diets are unhealthy and eating low

> > cholesterol foods has no healthy impact on blood cholesterol levels. Eggs

> > are good for you, so is whole milk, so is meat. Personally, I'd forget

> > about cholesterol if I were you. It has no real relevance to whether

> > you're going to be healthy or not.

> >

> >

> >

> > n

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

>

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I just had a full blood panel and the doctor wrote " excellent " next to my cholesterol levels--good bad and good good.  Everything was in average range.  I have been eating two eggs (usually) in the morning, olive oil, safflower oil, walnut oil, homemade mayo, a ton of DCCC, the full fat or 1/2 and 1/2 yogurt, baked chickens and still came out with good numbers.

 

I don't know if I had been eating the SADiet the numbers would be as good.  I don't eat out that much so stay with it.

 

I did know off the diet after finding out I was very anemic and taking iron pills.  That was in November '08.  That is normal now also so I'm working my way back.

 

Just thought I'd mention fwiw,

Debbie 40 cd

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At 01:37 PM 5/18/2009, you wrote:

I make all these modifications

because I'm trying to avoid going on statins, and I'm really

borderline.

Look into pantethine -- not pantothenic acid, pantethine, which is a B5

co-factor. 900 mg a day, in divided doses, is reputed to help lower

cholesterol naturally.

Marilyn

New

Orleans, Louisiana, USA

Undiagnosed IBS since 1976, SCD since 2001

Darn Good SCD Cook

No Human Children

Shadow & Sunny Longhair Dachshund

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wrote:

>

> I make all these modifications because I'm trying to avoid going on statins,

> and I'm really borderline.I do eat " good " fats though

Just to chime in on this subject...

The " conventional " wisdom on cutting out fats, etc. is not going to reduce your

cholesterol levels as much as going on a grain free diet -- which you've already

done by going on the SCD. Cutting fats will lead you to increase your carb

levels, which in turn can raise cholesterol levels.

Good points were also raised about Marilyn's experience.

Women naturally have higher levels of cholesterol than men. They need it. It's

right for things to be that way.

Did you know that there are tests on LDL subtypes that can be done to see if the

circulating cholesterol in your bloodstream is harmful or not?

Also, there are NO studies out there that show a benefit to women being on

statin medications.

Statins have horrible side effects. They can cause muscle damage. Doesn't sound

so bad, you say? Well, you've got one very important muscle thumping away all

day long in the center of your chest.

Low cholesterol levels are not the end-all and be-all of health. Cholesterol is

VITAL to your body's processes. You need cholesterol to stay alive.

I've got a blog article you should read here:

http://www.fathead-movie.com/?p=203

and here, Dr. Eades rips into a recent study:

http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/statins/more-statin-madness/

You've already questioned standard medical advice by going on the SCD. Don't

suddenly throw all of your research skills away when it comes to cholesterol and

statins!

B.

ASD son, RA self, SCD Nov. 2007

http://scdgirl.blogspot.com

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A simple fix is garlic. Either fresh or the Kyolic aged garlic extract will

lower cholesterol. For more severe high cholesterol, non-flushing niacin

(usually inositol hexaniacinate) works as well as the drugs that the doctors

prescribe.

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Speaking of coconut oil- in what can you substitute it for butter? And what ratios? I do want to try to use it more, jsut need to figure out how. Thanks!alyssa> Thanks for all the replies. Yes, I am going to modify the yogurt- I > drip the yogurt too which would make fat free more palatable, use > more egg whites.I have also used coconut oil which I will cut back > on as well.You are aware of the health benefits of coconut oil - right - beforeyou stop eating it - that it is a great natural anti-inflammatory, andan anti-fungal. Two things that are helpful with your disease.You are also aware of the theory in which the presence of diseaseraises cholesterol levels as - among others - Marilyn reported asone of the first symptoms when she got cancer. She asked herdoctor about it, he threw it back at her - and blamed it on herfood intake - instead of correlating it to her general health andchecking for other health issues. Just another way that conventionalmedicine is out of touch with health issues.And the whole "fat is evil - ban fat from the diet" trend in modernyears has done nothing so much as help create the modernobesity disaster. Traditional fats are good for you - that'swhy people have eaten them for millenia.Mara

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One more cholesterol question: If I really need to gain weight and am very skinny, could cholesterol still be a problem for me? Thanks for any replies, I"m confused about this!alyssaYou know, I agree with this. My cholesterol levels are only a "tad" above the normal range. Not only this, but the medically acceptable ranges of "normal" have changed over the years- they are narrower which will make more people "abnormal". I appreciate that my doctor is vigilant, but it becomes a scary experience to have everything picked apart. I've already been very vigilant about what I eat. I think loading up on fast food, cokes, and french fries will get anyone in trouble over time, but some recommendations are strange and the recommendations keep changing. I just want to be sure I don't overdo it on some SCD legal but high fat foods. I can deal with fat free yogurt, but I tend to agree with you.PJ

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Thanks for the Dr. Eades link. It is a really interesting observation that

makes a lot of the reported drug studies suspect.

> >

> > I make all these modifications because I'm trying to avoid going on statins,

> > and I'm really borderline.I do eat " good " fats though

>

> Just to chime in on this subject...

>

> The " conventional " wisdom on cutting out fats, etc. is not going to reduce

your cholesterol levels as much as going on a grain free diet -- which you've

already done by going on the SCD. Cutting fats will lead you to increase your

carb levels, which in turn can raise cholesterol levels.

>

> Good points were also raised about Marilyn's experience.

>

> Women naturally have higher levels of cholesterol than men. They need it. It's

right for things to be that way.

>

> Did you know that there are tests on LDL subtypes that can be done to see if

the circulating cholesterol in your bloodstream is harmful or not?

>

> Also, there are NO studies out there that show a benefit to women being on

statin medications.

>

> Statins have horrible side effects. They can cause muscle damage. Doesn't

sound so bad, you say? Well, you've got one very important muscle thumping away

all day long in the center of your chest.

>

> Low cholesterol levels are not the end-all and be-all of health. Cholesterol

is VITAL to your body's processes. You need cholesterol to stay alive.

>

> I've got a blog article you should read here:

>

> http://www.fathead-movie.com/?p=203

>

> and here, Dr. Eades rips into a recent study:

>

> http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/statins/more-statin-madness/

>

> You've already questioned standard medical advice by going on the SCD. Don't

suddenly throw all of your research skills away when it comes to cholesterol and

statins!

>

> B.

> ASD son, RA self, SCD Nov. 2007

> http://scdgirl.blogspot.com

>

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get it checked while fasting but even with family history my cardiologist said

mine's good and to keep stuffing my face with steak and sggs and get that weight

on -I'm 98/99lbs now-

great to hear about your gain!!!!!

eileen

>

> >

> >

> > You know, I agree with this. My cholesterol levels are only a " tad "

> > above the normal range. Not only this, but the medically acceptable

> > ranges of " normal " have changed over the years- they are narrower

> > which will make more people " abnormal " .

> >

> > I appreciate that my doctor is vigilant, but it becomes a scary

> > experience to have everything picked apart. I've already been very

> > vigilant about what I eat. I think loading up on fast food, cokes,

> > and french fries will get anyone in trouble over time, but some

> > recommendations are strange and the recommendations keep changing. I

> > just want to be sure I don't overdo it on some SCD legal but high

> > fat foods. I can deal with fat free yogurt, but I tend to agree with

> > you.

> >

> > PJ

> >

> >

> >

>

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Thanks Eileen, I'll get it checked soon hopefully!ALyssaget it checked while fasting but even with family history my cardiologist said mine's good and to keep stuffing my face with steak and sggs and get that weight on -I'm 98/99lbs now-great to hear about your gain!!!!!eileen> > >> >> > You know, I agree with this. My cholesterol levels are only a "tad" > > above the normal range. Not only this, but the medically acceptable > > ranges of "normal" have changed over the years- they are narrower > > which will make more people "abnormal".> >> > I appreciate that my doctor is vigilant, but it becomes a scary > > experience to have everything picked apart. I've already been very > > vigilant about what I eat. I think loading up on fast food, cokes, > > and french fries will get anyone in trouble over time, but some > > recommendations are strange and the recommendations keep changing. I > > just want to be sure I don't overdo it on some SCD legal but high > > fat foods. I can deal with fat free yogurt, but I tend to agree with > > you.> >> > PJ> >> >> >>

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At 04:23 PM 5/18/2009, you wrote:

You've already questioned

standard medical advice by going on the SCD. Don't suddenly throw all of

your research skills away when it comes to cholesterol and

statins!

Amen to that... and thank you for those links. I have a feeling I'm going

to spend more time on those sites. On second thought, maybe I don't thank

you! :-)

Marilyn

New

Orleans, Louisiana, USA

Undiagnosed IBS since 1976, SCD since 2001

Darn Good SCD Cook

No Human Children

Shadow & Sunny Longhair Dachshund

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Thanks, I'll go check out those links.

wrote:

>

> I make all these modifications because I'm trying to avoid going on statins,

> and I'm really borderline.I do eat " good " fats though

Just to chime in on this subject...

The " conventional " wisdom on cutting out fats, etc. is not going to reduce your cholesterol levels as much as going on a grain free diet -- which you've already done by going on the SCD. Cutting fats will lead you to increase your carb levels, which in turn can raise cholesterol levels.

Good points were also raised about Marilyn's experience.

Women naturally have higher levels of cholesterol than men. They need it. It's right for things to be that way.

Did you know that there are tests on LDL subtypes that can be done to see if the circulating cholesterol in your bloodstream is harmful or not?

Also, there are NO studies out there that show a benefit to women being on statin medications.

Statins have horrible side effects. They can cause muscle damage. Doesn't sound so bad, you say? Well, you've got one very important muscle thumping away all day long in the center of your chest.

Low cholesterol levels are not the end-all and be-all of health. Cholesterol is VITAL to your body's processes. You need cholesterol to stay alive.

I've got a blog article you should read here:

http://www.fathead-movie.com/?p=203

and here, Dr. Eades rips into a recent study:

http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/statins/more-statin-madness/

You've already questioned standard medical advice by going on the SCD. Don't suddenly throw all of your research skills away when it comes to cholesterol and statins!

B.

ASD son, RA self, SCD Nov. 2007

http://scdgirl.blogspot.com

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I thought the muscle damage with statins was a rare side effect, but maybe not??

wrote:

>

> I make all these modifications because I'm trying to avoid going on statins,

> and I'm really borderline.I do eat " good " fats though

Just to chime in on this subject...

The " conventional " wisdom on cutting out fats, etc. is not going to reduce your cholesterol levels as much as going on a grain free diet -- which you've already done by going on the SCD. Cutting fats will lead you to increase your carb levels, which in turn can raise cholesterol levels.

Good points were also raised about Marilyn's experience.

Women naturally have higher levels of cholesterol than men. They need it. It's right for things to be that way.

Did you know that there are tests on LDL subtypes that can be done to see if the circulating cholesterol in your bloodstream is harmful or not?

Also, there are NO studies out there that show a benefit to women being on statin medications.

Statins have horrible side effects. They can cause muscle damage. Doesn't sound so bad, you say? Well, you've got one very important muscle thumping away all day long in the center of your chest.

Low cholesterol levels are not the end-all and be-all of health. Cholesterol is VITAL to your body's processes. You need cholesterol to stay alive.

I've got a blog article you should read here:

http://www.fathead-movie.com/?p=203

and here, Dr. Eades rips into a recent study:

http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/statins/more-statin-madness/

You've already questioned standard medical advice by going on the SCD. Don't suddenly throw all of your research skills away when it comes to cholesterol and statins!

B.

ASD son, RA self, SCD Nov. 2007

http://scdgirl.blogspot.com

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Do Kyolic pills cause upper GI issues, though? I have mild acid reflux.--

A simple fix is garlic. Either fresh or the Kyolic aged garlic extract will lower cholesterol. For more severe high cholesterol, non-flushing niacin (usually inositol hexaniacinate) works as well as the drugs that the doctors prescribe.

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Thanks for the tip.--On Mon, May 18, 2009 at 2:18 PM, Wizop Marilyn L. Alm wrote:

At 01:37 PM 5/18/2009, you wrote:

I make all these modifications

because I'm trying to avoid going on statins, and I'm really

borderline.

Look into pantethine -- not pantothenic acid, pantethine, which is a B5

co-factor. 900 mg a day, in divided doses, is reputed to help lower

cholesterol naturally.

Marilyn

    New

Orleans, Louisiana, USA

    Undiagnosed IBS since 1976, SCD since 2001

    Darn Good SCD Cook

    No Human Children

    Shadow & Sunny Longhair Dachshund

       

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