Avoiding foods that contain cholesterol will not return a high cholesterol to normal. Your blood cholesterol level is influenced far more by how many calories and how much saturated and partially hydrogenated fat you eat, than by how much cholesterol is in your food. Cholesterol is found only in foods from animals, such as meat, fish, chicken, dairy products and eggs. It is not found in plants. More than 80 percent of the cholesterol in your body is made by your liver. Less than 20 percent comes from the food that you eat. When you eat more cholesterol, your liver makes less.
Your liver makes cholesterol from saturated fats, which are found in most foods but are concentrated in meat, poultry and whole-milk dairy products. The saturated fat is broken down by your liver into acetone units. If you are not taking in too many calories, your liver uses the acetone units for energy, but if you are taking in more calories than your body needs, your liver uses these same acetone units to manufacture cholesterol. That explains why eating two eggs a day does not raise blood cholesterol levels in the average American. They are already taking in so much cholesterol from meat, fish and chicken and diary products, that when they take in more, they absorb less.
The average North American takes in 350 mg per day of cholesterol. If he takes in 26 mg per day, he absorbs 41 percent. When he takes in 188 mg cholesterol per day, he absorbs only 36 percent, and when he takes in 421 mg per day (the equivalent of two eggs), he absorbs only 25 percent. Some people absorb more than five times as much as other people at the same intake. So you lower blood cholesterol levels far more effectively by eating less food, less saturated fat and less partially hydrogenated fats than by avoiding foods that contain cholesterol. More on diet to lower cholesterol and blood pressure
Archive
-
▼
2007
(199)
-
▼
May
(25)
- Deptression More Common in Women than Men
- Fatty Liver Can Be Treated with Diet Change
- HBA1C: A Better Test for Diagnosing and Managing D...
- Heart Attack Risk in Women Tripled by Trans Fats
- Stretching does not prevent muscle soreness
- Cure Stage Fright with a Common Blood Pressure Pill
- Systolic Blood Pressure More Important than Diastolic
- Diabetes Prevention and Treatment: Eat Whole Grains
- Endurance: What Athletes Can Learn from Sled Dogs
- Leaky Heart Valves are Common, Usually Harmless
- Arthritis: Reduce Pain, Stabilize Joints with Exer...
- Food During Exercise? Guidelines for Avoiding Fatigue
- Antioxidant Supplements Harmful? How to Interpret ...
- Most People Cannot Raise Their Metabolism with Exe...
- Diabetes can be caused by excess fat in muscles
- Shingles: Treat Immediately to Avoid Lifelong Pain
- Maximum Heart Rate Formula May Not Apply to You
- Avoiding Cholesterol in Foods Won't Lower Your Cho...
- Chronic Stuffy Nose: Fungus May Be the Culprit
- Heart Attack Risk: What The Tests Tell You
- Fat Belly, Large Bones, Irregular Periods: Check f...
- Protect Knees: Weak Quad Muscles Risk Cartilage Da...
- Pre-Diabetes: Belly Fat Dangerous Even If You Are ...
- Fructose is Not Better than Ordinary Sugar
- Cholesterol-Lowering Drugs Can Cause Muscle Pain
-
▼
May
(25)
Popular Posts
-
To use rope-jumping for fitness, you need to be skilled enough to jump continuously for twenty to thirty minutes, and jumping that long and ...
-
Of no other fat-loss activity -- eating less, walking on a treadmill, doing sit-ups -- can it be said that participants eagerly count the mi...
-
Some of the weight loss articles out there these days are getting a little nutty. New scientific studies that shed light on how metabolism w...
-
Aging does not cause you to lose muscles. Loss of muscle is caused by lack of exercise. You can preserve both muscle size and strength by co...
-
Athletes tend to push themselves 120 percent while exercising because their main objective is to jump higher, run faster or become stronger....
0 comments:
Post a Comment