Triglycerides
These are another type of cholesterol known as very low density lipoproteins. High levels have been linked with arteriosclerosis which is the thickening and hardening of the arteries and thus believed to increase the risk of heart disease and stroke. Interestingly, the negative impact of elevated triglycerides is less than that of the LDL:HDL ratios.
Arteriosclerosis
This is a condition whereby the artery walls become hardened which in turn reduces the blood supply and can eventually lead to total blockages. If this happens then a heart attack or stroke could be the result. Problems build up gradually as cells deep in the artery wall start to build up in an abnormal way eventually breaking into the artery itself and then attracting more cholesterol and calcium which further ads to the hardening.
None of these problem build up overnight and often take many years to reveal themselves so prevention is much easier than cure!
So What Can We Do Nutritionally?
Firstly review your sugar intake. It is sugar and saturated fats that push up cholesterol levels much more than the cholesterol in foods. Sugar also makes the blood more sticky and pushes up triglycerides. Keep sugar to an absolute minimum and ideally:-
Follow a low glycaemic diet. This is a diet in which foods are carbohydrate foods are converted to sugar slowly during the process of digestion. General guidelines for this are to eat a natural wholegrain diet i.e. brown rice, oats (not oats so simple but proper organic oats), wholemeal granary bread, fresh fruits (not tropical ones) and vegetables (not root ones unless raw and squashes.
Eat a minimum of 5 low GI fruit and vegetables daily.
Fish, poultry, meat, tofuy, beans, lentils and dairy are all low GI.
Minimise saturated fats from fatty meats such as pork, lamb and dairy products.
Increase oily fish i.e. mackerel, haddock, salmon, tuna, sardines and pilchards as high in Omega 3 oils which promote good HDL cholesterol.
Increase nuts (particularly walnuts), pumpkin, sunflower, linseed and sesame seeds and their oils as these are good sources of Omega 6 and some Omega 3 and promote good HDL’s.
Avoid white refined foods i.e. bread, cakes, biscuits, white rice, white pasta, confectionary etc.,
Eat moderate amounts wholegrains, i.e. oats, rye, brown rice, wholemeal bread as these are a good source of fibre which may help to reduce cholesterol levels. This in turn should help to improve bowel efficiency and make your bowel movements nice and regular which in turn aids the elimination of excess cholesterol.
Minimise caffeine intake – good alternatives to tea are red bush tea, green tea, white tea, fruit and herbal teas. Good alternatives to coffee are Yannoh, Caro or Teecino.
If you smoke, stop. Smoking actually triggers cell profileration, constricts blood vessels, reduces oxygen delivery and makes it more difficult for the body to dissolve blood clots.
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