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Message
Just found out my cholesterol and triglycerides are too high
Posted on 12/22/23 at 8:35 am
Posted on 12/22/23 at 8:35 am
Its no mystery. I live on the road, I eat bad food. I love stuff that is made by grandmas south of I-10 especially. Fried anything, also anything in south Louisiana.
I'm off fried food for a while and also seriously cutting back potatos and white bread. Switching to brown rice. Anything else y'all do that might help save me from eating oatmeal for an entire year?
ALso I'm trying to walk 1-2 miles/day. Doesn't always happen but every day or two.
I'm off fried food for a while and also seriously cutting back potatos and white bread. Switching to brown rice. Anything else y'all do that might help save me from eating oatmeal for an entire year?
ALso I'm trying to walk 1-2 miles/day. Doesn't always happen but every day or two.
Posted on 12/22/23 at 8:42 am to tadman
It's probably all of those 'copper cut' noodles you've been eating.
Posted on 12/22/23 at 8:59 am to tadman
Take fish oil supplement. Baked or grilled as alternative.
Also depend on your age. Taking a cholesterol pill daily is also an option if you can't keep it down.
Also depend on your age. Taking a cholesterol pill daily is also an option if you can't keep it down.
Posted on 12/22/23 at 8:59 am to tadman
Ho to the health and fitness board. There's a poster lsu77 or something like that. He is a good man to talk to about diets
Posted on 12/22/23 at 9:11 am to coolpapaboze
quote:
It's probably all of those 'copper cut' noodles you've been eating.
It is indeed. Flour noodles are full of cholesterol.
And yes, believe it or not, the copper dies make it slightly worse, as the tomato sauce has its own sugar in it and if the noodles pick up more sauce, that's more sugar getting into your system.
This is what it looks like - see all the hairs on the pasta? Magic how it picks up all that good sauce.

Edit, stand corrected. Evidently tomatos are good for reducing cholesterol. Ditch the noodles, eat more sauce.
This post was edited on 12/22/23 at 9:14 am
Posted on 12/22/23 at 10:06 am to tadman
Disclaimer - I am neither a physician nor an epidemiologist. I have been through something similar recently and I will share my perspective. Take it or leave it.
Dietary cholesterol and serum cholesterol are only slightly linked though there are some who think there is no connection between the two. That debate rags on. I have seen enough clinical studies and anecdotal evidence to conclude that there is a link, however, it is only slight. A massive reduction in dietary cholesterol only produces a small decrease in serum cholesterol. If you want to reduce triglycerides and serum cholesterol, both diet and exercise are required. Also, pharmaceuticals can help greatly.
DIET - Reduce intake of animal-derived foods (meat, eggs, and dairy). This will help cholesterol a little but not the best bang-for-the-buck. For triglyceride reduction, reduce fat in your diet and eat foods high in fiber. Saturated fat is the least healthy fat by far but you will need to reduce your overall fat consumption. Watch out for the huge amounts of fats that can be hidden inside of processed foods. Read labels carefully. Better yet, stop eating fast foods and boxed/bagged foods as much as possible.
USDA Guidelines
NIH - Triglycerides
EXERCISE - I do not understand all of the biochemical and physiological processes at work but I experienced significant cholesterol and triglyceride reductions after exercise increased. Walking a mile or two each day helps but you are going to need to ramp that up a bunch to see much movement in lipid labs. Google search the effect of exercise on lipids and LDL cholesterol. There are tons of information available that confirm that exercise helps both. I linked one below.
Exercise and LD Cholesterol
I will be honest. It is unlikely that you will be able "diet" your way into better lipid health. The benefits of diet alone usually don't fix the issue. You probably need to make permanent lifestyle and dietary changes if you want to ward off the cumulative deleterious health effects of high LDL cholesterol and triglycerides. Statins can help a lot but only you can decide if your situation warrants pharmacological intervention.
TL;DR
Eat less fat and cholesterol in your diet, exercise a lot, speak with your doc about benefits/risks of statins. Ask yourself why you need to change, develop a plan, and attack it.
I hope this helps. I probably just lit the fire of folks who will strongly disagree with my perspective. Use all info to form your own conclusion. Good luck.
Dietary cholesterol and serum cholesterol are only slightly linked though there are some who think there is no connection between the two. That debate rags on. I have seen enough clinical studies and anecdotal evidence to conclude that there is a link, however, it is only slight. A massive reduction in dietary cholesterol only produces a small decrease in serum cholesterol. If you want to reduce triglycerides and serum cholesterol, both diet and exercise are required. Also, pharmaceuticals can help greatly.
DIET - Reduce intake of animal-derived foods (meat, eggs, and dairy). This will help cholesterol a little but not the best bang-for-the-buck. For triglyceride reduction, reduce fat in your diet and eat foods high in fiber. Saturated fat is the least healthy fat by far but you will need to reduce your overall fat consumption. Watch out for the huge amounts of fats that can be hidden inside of processed foods. Read labels carefully. Better yet, stop eating fast foods and boxed/bagged foods as much as possible.
USDA Guidelines
NIH - Triglycerides
EXERCISE - I do not understand all of the biochemical and physiological processes at work but I experienced significant cholesterol and triglyceride reductions after exercise increased. Walking a mile or two each day helps but you are going to need to ramp that up a bunch to see much movement in lipid labs. Google search the effect of exercise on lipids and LDL cholesterol. There are tons of information available that confirm that exercise helps both. I linked one below.
Exercise and LD Cholesterol
I will be honest. It is unlikely that you will be able "diet" your way into better lipid health. The benefits of diet alone usually don't fix the issue. You probably need to make permanent lifestyle and dietary changes if you want to ward off the cumulative deleterious health effects of high LDL cholesterol and triglycerides. Statins can help a lot but only you can decide if your situation warrants pharmacological intervention.
TL;DR
Eat less fat and cholesterol in your diet, exercise a lot, speak with your doc about benefits/risks of statins. Ask yourself why you need to change, develop a plan, and attack it.
I hope this helps. I probably just lit the fire of folks who will strongly disagree with my perspective. Use all info to form your own conclusion. Good luck.
This post was edited on 12/22/23 at 10:08 am
Posted on 12/22/23 at 11:00 am to HTwsb
I second the fish oil suggestion. I meal prep and eat fairly healthy but have struggled in the past 2-3 years with high triglycerides. Used to take 1x 1000mg fish oil pill each day. Doctor recommended me to increase it up to 3 or 4. So now I take 2x 1000mg pills in the morning and 2 in the afternoon.
Posted on 12/22/23 at 11:04 am to tadman
Much more so than your diet, exercising regularly is the formula for lowering cholesterol.
Posted on 12/22/23 at 12:17 pm to tadman
quote:
Switching to brown rice.
Don’t. You can stick with white rice, just cut down on the amount that you eat.
Posted on 12/22/23 at 12:21 pm to auwaterfowler
When I was first diagnosed with high LDL and High TriG's, I simply cut out fast food (I also traveled alot at the time and ate like shite). A couple months later both my cholesterol and triglycerides were back down into normal range from that one change.
Posted on 12/22/23 at 2:14 pm to HTwsb
quote:
Take fish oil supplement.
This has been proven that it does absolutely nothing for you
Posted on 12/22/23 at 2:17 pm to xXLSUXx
quote:
Doctor recommended me to increase it up to 3 or 4. So now I take 2x 1000mg pills in the morning and 2 in the afternoon.
You need a new doctor
Posted on 12/22/23 at 2:40 pm to tadman
quote:
Switching to brown rice.
The nutritional value between white and brown rice isn’t significant. There are a lot of things you can do to improve your diet in a meaningful way, this isn’t one of the ones to focus on.
Posted on 12/22/23 at 3:13 pm to tadman
quote:
Flour noodles are full of cholesterol
Only if made with egg yokes. You seem to be confusing cholesterol with carbohydrates. As mentioned below animal fats and vegetable oils are the sources of cholesterol/triglycerides.
I agree that exercise with diet changes can made a difference for some.
Posted on 12/22/23 at 3:19 pm to r3lay3r
quote:
As mentioned below animal fats and vegetable oils are the sources of cholesterol/triglycerides.
Not really, a diet high in Sugar is the main cause of high Triglycerides and LDL
Posted on 12/22/23 at 4:39 pm to tadman
Don’t eat brown rice and think you’re doing anything. Might as well eat the shite you actually want.
You could also eat beef and beef fat and eggs everyday for a year and your levels will either be lower or the same , likely better.
Dietary cholesterol has little impact on your numbers. A strong argument could be made that the carbs inflame your system and cause the problems. So again, don’t eat shitty arse brown rice.
You could also eat beef and beef fat and eggs everyday for a year and your levels will either be lower or the same , likely better.
Dietary cholesterol has little impact on your numbers. A strong argument could be made that the carbs inflame your system and cause the problems. So again, don’t eat shitty arse brown rice.
Posted on 12/22/23 at 6:52 pm to Tigers0891
Read 'Sugar Busters' and learn about the glycemic index for foods.
Posted on 12/22/23 at 6:53 pm to Tigers0891
Dup
This post was edited on 12/23/23 at 2:00 am
Posted on 12/22/23 at 8:21 pm to tadman
Cut all fat and carbs. Get on as many meds as the doctors will give you.
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