Everyone that walks into a doctors office today has their cholesterol levels checked and told they have high cholesterol if it's over 200. If you are diabetic, it doesn't matter what your cholesterol levels are.
The problem with this practice IS... total cholesterol does not tell the whole story.
Some of the risk factors below (when elevated) cause 'oxidized LDL' (inflammation) and a greater chance for a heart attack or stroke:
* Homocysteine (should be 6.2 or less)
* Triglycerides (should be less than 150, and the lower the better)
* Blood Sugar Levels
- up to 99 (normal)
- 100 to 125 (pre-diabetic)
-126 and above (most likely diabetic)
* Cortisol ('stress' hormones)
* Smoking
* Deficiency is some vitamins, especially the B's and C.
When you get a chance, read an article titled, "Is Heart Disease All Due to Blood Clots?" by Dr Malcolm Kendrick
[http://www.thincs.org/Malcolm.htm#clots]
Excerpts:
Things that create "free radicals" and oxidized LDL... Smoking, high blood sugar levels (diabetes), stress... Risk factors that damage the "endothelium" include elevated levels of homocysteine, blood sugar, insulin, cortisol (stress hormones), triglycerides, smoking and deficiency in some vitamins, such as C and the B's.
LDL (Oxidised LDL)
" This is a complex pathway. When platelets start to stick together, they release free radicals. "Free radicals" oxidise LDL. Oxidised LDL is a powerful blood clotting factor. LDL is also incorporated into the blood clot as it forms, and provides a `lipid' surface (along with VLDL) for the construction of fibrin. Fibrin is the hugely strong protein strand that binds a clot together and makes it `tough.' "
~~~
So when you try to 'just lower your cholesterol', you are not correcting the underlying problem. One of the most common causes of elevated cholesterol is hypothyroidism. "As many as ten million Americans with high cholesterol levels may not know that their cholesterol is elevated due to undiagnosed thyroid problems."
[http://thyroid.about.com/cs/symptomsproblems/a/cholesterol.htm]
Also read Dr Graveline's article "Statin Alternatives":
http://www.spacedoc.net/statin_alternatives.htm
Buffered Aspirin - 81 mg (contains beneficial magnesium)
CoQ10 - 100 to 150 mg (gelcaps - NOT powdered) with some Vit E
* Folic Acid - 400-800 mcg
* B6 - 80-100mg
* B12 - 200-250mcg
* (all 3 of these B Vitamins control Homocysteine)
Omega 3 (Fish Oil or Cod Liver Oil) - There is no upper limit
Dr Graveline's Statin Alternatives reduce and prevent inflammation, are anti-oxidants, reduce platelet stickiness, control (toxic) homocysteine and have the same anti-inflammatory affect as 20 mg's of Lipitor, without side effects.
Fran