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CONTROLLING YOUR CHOLESTEROL
Topics included in this section are:

Cholesterol Facts You Should Know
10 Ways to Control Your Cholesterol
Cholesterol Content in Common Foods
Counting Cholesterol Numbers - What They Mean?
Controlling Kids' Cholesterol

Since you will see the word "cholesterol" on just about every food package you buy, it's important to know what it is, what it does, and how much is safe.

What cholesterol is. Cholesterol is not a fat. Biochemically it's called a "sterol." It contains no calories, so the body cannot derive any energy from it. Cholesterol forms an integral part of the cell membranes throughout your body, sort of like the mortar that holds the brick wall together. It is particularly important in the cellular structure of the brain and central nervous system, and is an important component of the myelin sheath that provides insulation to the nerves. The body uses cholesterol to make bile acids, which are necessary for proper food digestion. It's also a vital part of adrenal and sex hormones (estrogen, progesterone, testosterone), and it helps the body manufacture vitamin D.

Only the cell membranes of animal tissue contain cholesterol. Cell membranes of plants are composed of fiber, not cholesterol. When you see "no cholesterol" on a package of fruit, vegetables, grains, or even vegetable oil, don't believe that the manufacturer has done you a favor by removing the cholesterol. There was no cholesterol in these foods to begin with. While cholesterol is essential to life, the body makes all the cholesterol it needs. You can live quite well, even better, with eating little or no cholesterol.

What cholesterol does. Cholesterol enters the body from saturated fats in animal sources, such as meat, poultry, egg yolks, liver, butter, cheese, and other dairy products. The cholesterol goes to the liver where it joins the cholesterol that is made there. The cholesterol is transported from the liver to the cells by low density lipoproteins (LDL), which acts like a nutritional ferry boat, loading up the cholesterol and navigating through the bloodstream, stopping at cells and depositing cholesterol to the cells that need it. If a cell already has enough cholesterol, it "refuses delivery" of the cholesterol cargo. The excess LDL stays in the blood where the cholesterol is deposited in the walls of arteries, causing atherosclerotic plaque. The more plaque that builds up, the narrower the arteries become, until eventually the blood supply to vital organs is reduced. This is why LDLs are known as the "bad cholesterol."*

But take heart, a nutritional rescuer is also present in the bloodstream, the high density lipoproteins, or HDLs. These are known as "good cholesterol," since they travel like a vacuum cleaner through the bloodstream, picking up excess cholesterol in the bloodstream, and also possibly sucking the cholesterol from the fat-laden plaques. The HDLs carry this excess cholesterol back to the liver, which converts it to bile, which is eliminated into the intestines. How your liver handles cholesterol is determined primarily by genetics, and secondarily by your diet.

While this is an oversimplification of a complicated biochemical process, it helps us understand two conclusions:

  • Any diet that raises cholesterol and LDLs and/or lowers HDL is bad.
  • Any diet that lowers cholesterol and/or raises HDL is good.

NUTRIMINDER

To remember which cholesterol is "good" and which is "bad," think of LDL as "lousy" cholesterol, and HDL as "healthy" cholesterol. As a further reminder, "lousy fats," the ones that are saturated or hydrogenated, contribute to lousy cholesterol.

How much cholesterol do you need? If your body has just the right amount of cholesterol, HDL, and LDL, it is in cholesterol balance. But how much is the right amount?

Homemade versus dietary cholesterol. For most people, about eighty percent of the cholesterol in their blood is made by their own body, with the rest coming from their diet. In fact, your body needs cholesterol so much that it makes around 3,000 milligrams per day that's ten times the maximum recommendation for daily dietary cholesterol. It is estimated that around thirty percent of people are sensitive to the cholesterol-raising effects of dietary cholesterol. Normally, when a healthy person eats high cholesterol foods, the liver reduces its own cholesterol production to keep blood cholesterol at a healthy level. In cholesterol-sensitive individuals, this internal monitoring mechanism doesn't operate, so that their blood cholesterol level goes up when they eat high-cholesterol foods.

One theory that explains cholesterol sensitivity is humans are by nature vegetarians. Originally, human bodies were not genetically equipped to metabolize dietary cholesterol, since plants are cholesterol-free. As the human diet began to include animal products, some people's bodies developed metabolic ways to dispose of excess cholesterol and some didn't. People who descended from the ones that didn't adapt are the cholesterol-sensitive ones.

Gender differences of cholesterol. Women tend to have higher levels of HDL than men, since female sex hormones release HDL and male sex hormones lower HDL. At menopause, estrogen production drops, and so does HDL. Just another mid-life biochemical quirk that should stimulate menopausal-age women to start an HDL-raising exercise program.

With every one percent reduction of total blood cholesterol, there is about a two percent reduction in the risk of heart attack. Getting your total cholesterol down and your HDL, or good cholesterol, up is good medicine. Here's what you can do to control your cholesterol.

1. Eat less fat. Keep your total daily fat intake below 20 percent of your daily calories. If you average 2,250 calories a day, eat no more than 450 calories from fat, or 50 grams of fat (there are 9 calories per gram of fat).

NUTRITIP:
How Much Cholesterol Every Day?

The American Heart Association recommends that people keep their total daily cholesterol intake under 300 milligrams.

2. Eat the right fats. Eat foods that are low in saturated fats, that contain mostly monounsaturated fats, and that are high in essential fatty acids. This means eating fats from seafood and plant sources. Minimize foods of animal origin, which are high in saturated fats. Keep your saturated fats to less than ten percent (better is seven percent) of your total daily calories.

Get used to checking the package label for grams of saturated fat per serving. Avoid "hydrogenated" or "partially hydrogenated" oils and shortenings. New insights into the fatty food/heart disease correlation reveal that the amount of saturated fats and hydrogenated fats in a food may actually do more harm to the fats in your blood than the cholesterol in the food. The trans fatty acids in hydrogenated fats do all kinds of bad things to blood fats, such as: increase LDL (bad) cholesterol, decrease HDL (good) cholesterol, increase triglycerides, and increase lipoprotein A - the blood fat that contributes to plaques in the arteries. Look for labels that claim "contains no saturated fats" or "contains no hydrogenated oils."

Eat more fish that contain omega 3 fatty acids (coldwater fish: seabass, salmon and albacore tuna), which help lower blood fat levels and reduce the risk of blood clots, which can clog arteries and cause strokes and heart attacks. Replacing saturated fats in your diet with unsaturated ones (for example, vegetable and fish oils) can reduce blood LDL levels. Yet, a diet that is too high in polyunsaturated fat (more than 10 percent of daily calories) can suppress production of HDL. Choose monounsaturated fats instead, such as olive oil, canola oil, and nut oils. These monounsaturated fats do not lower HDL levels.

3. Cut cholesterol-containing foods. Too much cholesterol in the diet increases the number of LDLs, the bad cholesterol. As we said above, cholesterol is found only in animal products, not plant foods. Therefore, eating less animal foods and more plant foods will lower the blood cholesterol. While eating lean beef and peeling the skin off chicken reduces the cholesterol in these foods, there is still cholesterol and saturated fat within even lean meat and poultry. Organ meat (such as liver) is particularly loaded with cholesterol. (Making cholesterol is the liver's job.) Lean beef, lean lamb, and lean chicken are all about the same in the amount of cholesterol they contain. Egg yolks, milk fat, and shellfish (shrimp and lobster) are high in cholesterol. Other oily fish (such as salmon and tuna) are much lower in cholesterol. White-fleshed fish tend to be the lowest in saturated fat.

While your goal may be to raise the good cholesterol, you can't get "good cholesterol" directly from foods. If you already have a high cholesterol, temporarily switching to a vegetarian diet (with fish and non-fat dairy products, such as yogurt) may help lower your levels quickly. Persons who go on a vegetarian diet and reduce their fat intake by 26 percent have shown a significant drop in blood cholesterol levels in just six weeks. One study showed that switching from whole milk to nonfat milk lowered the total cholesterol of people in the study by seven percent and the LDL (bad) cholesterol by eleven percent after six weeks.

NUTRITIP:
Overweight Cholesterol

We think of fatty foods as the cause of high cholesterol, yet eating more calories than we need from any food (fats or carbohydrates) can raise blood cholesterol, since being overweight itself raises blood cholesterol and increases the risk for heart disease. So, controlling your intake of all foods is important in controlling your cholesterol.

4. Eat cholesterol-lowering foods. Besides avoiding cholesterol-containing foods, plant foods actually lower blood cholesterol. Plant foods have chemicals in them called sterols which, like cholesterol, hold the cell membranes together. By a fortunate biochemical quirk, plant sterols are not absorbed through the intestines and into the bloodstream, but they do decrease the absorption of sterols (cholesterol) in animal foods. The following are some plant foods that lower blood cholesterol.

  • Soy protein. Switch from sirloin to soy. Replacing animal protein with soy protein reduces blood cholesterol levels, even when the total amount of fat in the diet remains the same. A recent review of 38 studies concluded that eating soy protein lowered blood cholesterol by an average of 32 milligrams (9 percent), LDL cholesterol by 22 milligrams (13 percent), and triglyceride (total fats) concentrations by ten percent. As an added perk, the HDL cholesterol increased a bit. Soy protein worked best in people who needed it most. While the amount of soy protein it takes to lower your cholesterol varies considerably among individuals, as a general guide, if half of your daily protein comes from soy (between 30 and 40 grams of soy protein a day), you should notice the cholesterol-lowering effect. This can be accomplished by simply changing from cow's milk to soy milk, meat to soy substitutes, or from dairy products to tofu. As an added health benefit, soy products contain phytonutrients called "isoflavones," which reduce the risk of some cancers.

  • Fiber. Soluble fiber slows the absorption of the cholesterol from animal foods and acts as an intestinal broom to sweep the cholesterol out. Top-billing for research-backed, cholesterol-lowering effects of fiber goes to oatbran . Eating one to two ounces a day (30-60 grams) along with a lowfat, low cholesterol diet can reduce blood cholesterol by ten to fifteen percent. Similar benefits can be obtained from other soluble fiber-rich foods, such as beans, cruciferous vegetables, apricots, prunes, and a super-soluble fiber-rich food, psyllium, a bran-like grain which has been shown to lower cholesterol by fifteen percent within two to four months, after eating an average of ten grams (three tsp.) per day.

    NUTRITIP:
    Can Yogurt Lower Cholesterol?

    While medical studies are inconclusive about whether or not yogurt lowers cholesterol, there is some experimental evidence to suggest that byproducts of lactobacilli fermentation (which is what turns milk into yogurt) inhibit the body's ability to make cholesterol. Obviously, the cholesterol-lowering effect was greatest with non-fat yogurt. The most striking results were seen in experiments on swine. Since these animals seem to metabolize cholesterol similar to humans, it is possible that yogurt may lower cholesterol in humans, too.

  • Nuts. A recent study showed that volunteers who got 30 percent of their daily calories from fat, yet got two thirds of this fat from walnuts lower their cholesterol by twelve percent within four weeks. The cholesterol lowering effect of nuts was thought to be due to the combination of fiber, B- vitamins, and vitamin E, and to the fact that these fats are primarily unsaturated ones. Yet, don't go too nutty. Since nuts are high in fat, it's important not to eat too many.

  • Garlic. The jury is still out on whether or not garlic will lower your cholesterol. Powdered garlic supplements probably will not. Eating one clove of garlic per day may. Watch the medical news for a garlic update. Until then, stick to the proven cholesterol-lowering foods, soy and fiber, and eat garlic because you enjoy it.

  • Alcohol. You may also read that 1 to 2 alcoholic drinks a day can raise HDL cholesterol. Yet, similar to garlic, the jury is still out on whether the HDL-raising effect is significant enough to lower the risk of heart disease and to outweigh the potentially harmful effects of alcohol abuse.

NUTRITIP:
Read the Fine Print

While some foods boast "cholesterol-free" on the front of the package, the fine print on the back tells you they are full of saturated and fake fats. Highly saturated tropical oils, such as palm kernel oil, may have a worse effect on cholesterol levels than foods that contain cholesterol. Hydrogenated fats will also push cholesterol levels higher. Some cereals, for example, may be labeled "cholesterol-free" on the front of the package, yet if you read the fine print these contain hydrogenated tropical oils.

5. Get lean. Trimming excess body fat can increase the levels of good cholesterol (HDL). It is not only excess body fat that influences cholesterol levels, it's where you carry it. Studies show that men who carry excess fat around the middle (a body type we refer to as "apples") are at a higher risk of coronary artery disease than those who carry excess weight around the hips and buttocks ("pears"). Research has shown that apple-shaped people should pay even more attention to staying lean through a combination of exercise and a lowfat diet. Being over-fat increases LDL and decreases HDL, just the reverse of what you want, and this effect seems to be more aggravated in "apples" rather than "pears."

6. Exercise. Aerobic exercise (the kind that gets your heart rate up) raises the level of HDL cholesterol and may also reduce the level of LDL. In fact, since there is no such thing as eating foods high in HDL cholesterol, the only two ways you can raise HDL cholesterol is by exercising and reducing your body fat. Exercise is one of the few cholesterol-lowering activities that accomplish all three goals: lowering total cholesterol, raising HDLs, and lowering LDLs. Exercise stimulates the body to manufacture more HDL. The cholesterol level of athletes is much lower than that of sedentary individuals.

NUTRITIP:
Is Cholesterol Really the Cardiac Culprit?

The healthcare industry has built a whole cardiovascular complex (almost a religion) around heart disease and cholesterol, and certainly experimental evidence seems to indicate that there is a cause-and-effect relationship between high cholesterol diets and a high incidence of heart disease. Yet, other factors may be involved. Is it really the cholesterol in the food that causes problems, or could there be something else present (or absent) in high cholesterol foods that affects heart disease? Why do plant-food-eaters have lower cholesterol than animal-food-eaters? While the obvious answer is that plant food doesn't contain cholesterol and animal food does, could there be another explanation? Plant foods are high in phytonutrients and antioxidants, such as vitamin C, and fiber. Meat, on the other hand, is low in vitamin C and fiber. Our belief is that while it's easier to blame heart disease on the one chemical-cholesterol-the connection is more complex. Switching from a primarily animal-based diet to one based on plant and seafood sources may be just what the heart doctor ordered.

7. Relax. Stress releases stress hormones, such as adrenaline, which can elevate blood cholesterol levels. A daily relaxation program, such as meditation, deep-breathings or mental imagery can lower blood cholesterol.

8. Graze. Grazing on many mini meals throughout the day rather than eating three big meals can lower cholesterol. In studies comparing frequent snackers to three-meal-a-day eaters, the grazers had lower cholesterol.

9. Don't smoke. Smoking makes everything that's bad for the heart worse.

10. Raise low cholesterol kids. Children who grow up with a plant and seafood-based diet rather than one high in animal-based foods are more likely to grow up with healthier hearts.

Here are some of the more common cholesterol-containing foods:

FOOD CHOLESTEROL (milligrams)
Human milk 32 (varies)
Meats (3 ounces)
  • Liver
  • Lean ground beef, lamb, chicken breast, pork

  • 400-500
    78
    Egg, whole or egg yolk (1 large) 213
    Fish (3 ounces):
  • Shrimp
  • Lobster
  • Mackerel
  • Salmon
  • Catfish
  • Tuna
  • Crab
  • Snapper
  • Cod
  • Halibut
  • Clams
  • Orange roughy

  • 130-166
    81
    62
    47-60
    49
    42-50
    36-50
    40
    37
    35
    29
    17
    Dairy products:
    Milk (1 cup)
  • nonfat
  • 1 percent
  • 2 percent
  • whole (3.3-3.7 percent)
    Yogurt (1 cup):
  • nonfat
  • lowfat
  • whole
    Cheese (1 ounce):
  • cheddar
  • cheddar, lowfat
    Cottage cheese (1/2 cup)
  • nonfat
  • 1 percent fat
  • 2 percent fat
    Butter (1 tbs.)


  • <5
    10
    18
    33-35

    <5
    15
    29

    30
    6

    10
    10
    15
    10

    Note: Recommended maximum daily cholesterol allowance: less than 300 milligrams per day. There is no RDA minimum for cholesterol. Since your body makes all it needs, it's not essential that you eat any.

    Here are some cholesterol numbers you should know in case your doctor presents them to you and you wonder what they mean:

    Total cholesterol

  • Desirable: less than 200 milligrams (preferably 180)
  • Borderline: 200-239 milligrams
  • High: 240 milligrams and above

    LDL cholesterol

  • Desirable: less than 130 milligrams
  • Borderline-high: 130-159 milligrams
  • High: 160 milligrams or above

    HDL cholesterol

  • Low: less than 35 milligrams
  • Desirable: 50 or above

    Heart healthy numbers:

  • Triglycerides: under 150 mg.
  • Cholesterol: under 200
  • LDL: under 130
  • HDL: above 50
  • Cholestrol/HDL: <3.5

    What the numbers mean and what you should shoot for. Doctors use these numbers both as a guide to predicting a person's risk of heart disease and as blood tests to monitor the effects of treatment. Rather than using absolute numbers, cardiologists use ratios, both of LDL to HDL and of total cholesterol to HDL. An ideal ratio is 3.5 to 1 or less. For example, if your LDL is 130 and HDL is 40, your ratio is 3.3 to 1. As the ratio rises above 3.5 to 1, the risk of coronary artery disease increases. The number that seems to be the most predictive of heart disease is the ratio of total cholesterol to HDL. For example, a cholesterol of 200 and HDL of 50 would give you a cholesterol-to-HDL ratio of 4 to 1. A cholesterol-to-HDL ratio greater than 4.5 to 1 increases a person's risk of coronary artery disease. The risk doubles at a ratio of 5 to 1 and doubles again at a ratio of 7 to 1. Best is a ratio of less than 3.5 to 1.

    The heart-healthy magic number is 3.5 or less.

    Cardiologists pay a lot of attention to the level of HDL as a predictor of heart disease. One study showed that the risk of heart disease was 38 percent higher in men with HDL under 35, even if their total cholesterol was below 200. So, shoot for a high HDL and a low total cholesterol.

    NUTRITIP:
    Prepare For Your Test

    Several things can affect the accuracy of cholesterol blood tests: fluctuations in weight, changes in diet, pregnancy, and excessive alcohol intake. The most accurate results are obtained when your weight has been stable for at least two weeks and you are eating your usual diet. While total cholesterol and HDL are fairly accurate without fasting, the most accurate measurements of triglycerides and LDL can be obtained first thing in the morning after a 12- hour, overnight fast. (To avoid the discomfort of an overnight fast, get a routine non-fasting blood cholesterol. If it's borderline or high, get the complete profile, which needs to be done after fasting.)

    Why worry about cholesterol in children? Aren't heart disease and stroke diseases of older persons? Wrong! You don't get heart disease all of a sudden, even though the heart attack or stroke may be a surprise. Cardiovascular disease begins slowly, one cholesterol molecule at a time. Consider these facts:

    • The importance of controlling cholesterol in kids is supported by evidence from the Korean war era, when autopsies of soldiers in their late teens and early twenties revealed build-up of cholesterol-related plaque and narrowing of the arteries, even though on the surface these were healthy men.

    • Fatty streaks have been found in autopsies of children as young as three years of age, and autopsy studies have shown fatty accumulations in the coronary arteries in more than half of children ages 10 to 14. Also, studies have shown that in countries with high rates of coronary artery disease, both children and adults have higher cholesterol levels.

    • Studies have also shown that children and adolescents with elevated cholesterol levels are more likely to have high levels as adults. Autopsy studies in children have also shown a relationship between LDL cholesterol levels (obtained before death) and the presence of fatty streaks in coronary arteries. (High cholesterol and fat deposits in the arteries upon autopsy also correlate well in adults.)

    • Children with high cholesterol levels are three times more likely to have high cholesterol levels as adults than kids with normal cholesterol levels. Even though there have been no long-term studies demonstrating the value of lowering children's cholesterol levels to prevent coronary artery disease in adulthood, we can rely on common sense: children growing up with a healthy diet are more likely to grow up to be adults with healthy hearts. As a general guide, children shouldn't eat more than 100 milligrams of cholesterol per 1,000 calories in their diet.

    Should children have routine cholesterol testing? Currently, the Committee on Nutrition of the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends:

    • No infants, regardless of family history, should be put on a low-cholesterol diet under one year of age. (We believe under two years of age would be wiser.)

    • If there is a family history of hypercholesterolemia (a metabolic quirk causing very high cholesterol and fatty deposits in the skin), children should have their cholesterol checked and monitored beginning at age two years and rechecked annually.

    • Children whose parents or grandparents (under 55 years of age) have a history of coronary artery or cerebrovascular disease should have their cholesterol checked before entering school and every few years thereafter.

    • Children with parents whose cholesterol level is 240 milligrams or more should be tested anytime after age two and tested again five years later.

    For school-age children, an acceptable blood cholesterol level would be below 170 milligrams. In a child with a serum cholesterol above this level or with a positive family history for any of the above risk factors, a complete blood lipoprotein panel (i.e., HDL, LDL, total cholesterol, and triglycerides) should be done on blood samples drawn in the morning after a 12-hour fast. (To avoid the discomfort of fasting, do a routine nonfasting blood-cholesterol-level test first. If the result is borderline or high, get the complete profile, which needs to be done after fasting.)

    The AAP does not believe that routine cholesterol tests are necessary for every child. Every child over two should be on a low-cholesterol diet anyway, and foods high in cholesterol (for example, a Big Mac contains 103 milligrams, a Whopper contains 90 milligrams, and a Double Whopper with cheese contains 195 milligrams) should be discouraged for many nutritional reasons. The foods that children should eat more of (fruits, vegetables, grains, lowfat dairy, and fish) tend to be already low in cholesterol.

    Though it's not healthy to have a cholesterol phobia, the earlier you help your children learn to be cholesterol conscious, the better for their hearts. Eating habits developed in childhood are likely to carry over into adulthood. Children who grow up on a high-fat, high cholesterol diet are likely to continue this fat preference, whereas children who grow up with a healthy diet are more likely to choose healthy foods as adults.

    NUTRITIP

    When fast-food establishments boast that their french fries are "cooked in cholesterol-free, 100 percent vegetable oil," they are often referring to hydrogenated vegetable oil. This stuff stands up better to both life on a shelf and the heat of the fryer, but the effect on your blood cholesterol levels is similar to that of lard.

    * The cholesterol that is attached to the LDL's is actually the same as the cholesterol that is joined to the HDL's. There are not two different kinds of cholesterol, "good" and "bad." These terms are used to refer to the possibly helpful or harmful effects of the lipoprotein-cholesterol combination.

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