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Inflammation, Intermittent Fasting, Nutrition, Testosterone

Debunking The Cholesterol Myth And Why Statins Are a BAD Idea

Yesterday and today I held a Facebook live about a very important subject that has come up in conversation with a few of my clients and prospective clients: cholesterol and statins. After my first little rant on Facebook, I was approached by a friend of mine in his mid-thirties who has been told he has high cholesterol and therefore his doctor recommends he takes statins. I was outraged by his doctor’s suggestion. Statins are an absolute joke. Not only do they not actually prevent heart disease or strokes, but they severely destroy your cells in your body and other crucial mechanisms.

Cholesterol is a critical molecule for cell membrane health throughout your entire body and your brain. It’s an integral component of your blood plasma. It gives you physical energy, enables cognitive function (ability to learn, remember and concentrate) and an addition to other crucial functions in your body, it is essential for the creation of sex hormones in your body. Cholesterol is essential in the production of testosterone, for example, in men, and indeed women. Without cholesterol, you can’t be a human!

Knowing this, can you imagine just how dangerous statins are for your health? Taking statins, you will become less of a man. It may not surprise you that the same drug companies that manufacture statins also manufacture Viagra – sound familiar? Pill for a pill?

Seriously. It’s not even cholesterol that is the villain in heart disease. It’s inflammation. If your doctor ever threatens statins to you, I suggest sending them the article from Mark Sisson, that is about to follow. Firstly, check out my Facebook Live replays:

Cholesterol is a waxy, charming lipid gracing every cell’s membrane and our blood plasma. Its jobs, which are many, include insulating neurons, building and maintaining cellular membranes, metabolizing fat soluble vitamins, producing bile, and kick-starting the body’s synthesis of many hormones, including the sex hormones. Cool stuff actually.

Given all the work cholesterol has to do, the liver is careful to ensure the body always has enough, producing some 1000-1400 milligrams of it each day. In comparison, the 300 milligram recommended limit for dietary cholesterol (your tax dollars at work in the USDA) is a drop in the bucket. And get this: our livers come with feedback mechanisms (at no additional cost) that regulate cholesterol production in response to our dietary intake. When we eat more, it makes less, and vice-versa. Imagine that!

(Interesting note: While animal products like meat, eggs and dairy, are far and away the primary source of dietary cholesterol, plants contain trace amounts of cholesterol and cholesterol-like substances called phytosterols, which may help lower blood or “serum” cholesterol. Not that that matters, as we shall soon see.

So, what’s with all the acronyms on my cholesterol profile, you ask. Let’s take a look. First, there are high density lipoproteins (HDL). (Lipoproteins are spherical fat particles with water-soluble proteins around their exterior. They transport cholesterol). HDL: everybody loves this guy. He has the popular job of transferring cholesterol from the body’s tissues back to the liver. It’s basically the end of the line with this route, and the liver then excretes it through bile. HDL is the one to naturally help get rid of excess cholesterol when the body’s done with it, hence his universal popularity. Some cholesterologists (just made that up) even refer to him as Nature’s garbage truck.

Next, there are low density lipoproteins, LDL. LDL is a lipoprotein and delivery man as well. He has the disgraced job of transporting cholesterol after production from the liver to the body’s tissues. Remember, this is an important job! That cholesterol has a honey-do list a mile long.

Ironically, it turns out that it’s not the cholesterol part of the LDL or HDL moiety that is dangerous, but the actual lipoprotein part. Unfortunately, once medicine had found a way to differentiate between the amount of HDL and LDL in a cost-effective blood test, it was the cholesterol part that got the short end of the deal.

The latest research into LDL shows that there are actually sub-categories of this cholesterol transporter and that some are more dangerous than others. The larger, more billowy LDL particles are now thought to have little or no significant role in heart disease. On the other hand, the smaller, dense LDL particles are the ones believed to be most involved in the process of inflammation that begins the atherosclerosis cascade. And wouldn’t you know it, but it’s a diet high in simple carbs that most readily promotes the formation of these small LDL particles! Unfortunately, this important distinction is probably something your doctor knows very little about, yet it’s the number of small particle LDL that might be the most important reading in any cholesterol test. So a total cholesterol of, say, 230 or even 250 might not be dangerous at all if your HDL is high and your small particle LDL is low.

Before we move on, let’s give brief mention to triglycerides. Triglycerides are essentially the form that fat takes as it travels to the body’s tissues through the bloodstream. The relationship between triglycerides and cholesterol is more of an association. A high triglyceride level, which is unequivocally fuelled by a high carb diet, is very often a marker for other problems in the body, particularly insulin resistance (and accompanying risk of diabetes) as well as inflammation (with its risk of heart disease). High levels are often seen with low HDL cholesterol. Once again, the high carb diet wreaks havoc. Read More On Marks Daily Apple

But isn’t cholesterol the reason for heart disease? What about all that plaque that builds up in your arteries? What’s the number one cause of heart disease I hear you say?

It all boils down to inflammation. Inflammation is the number one factor in heart disease. This is an accepted fact now, but it still gets little attention and no real prevention or treatment. Think about it: you have your cholesterol levels checked every five years or more if your profile is “problematic.” When do you have biomarkers for inflammation checked? Unless you’ve had a heart attack or been diagnosed with a serious medical condition, probably never.

Inflammation. What is it caused by? Not fat, but carbohydrates. Yes, sugars and processed carbs are highest on the list of perpetrators here, but grains and starches as a whole contribute to the problem. LDL rises directly not with the amount of saturated fat you eat but with rising levels of inflammation caused by carbs and trans fats. READ MORE ON MARKS DAILY APPLE

Want to reverse inflammation? It’s really not that hard when you know how. Join me, you have about 5 hours until the doors close!

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