What kind of diet helps reduce cholesterol levels?
Diet is the first line of treatment for lowering cholesterol.
If diet changes fail to bring the cholesterol below 200mg, and the LDL
cholesterol ("bad cholesterol") below 130 mg, doctors then add medication
to the diet treatment.
A diet for lowering blood cholesterol, as recommended by the
American Heart Association, is designed to have less
than 30 percent of calories from fat and less than 10 percent from saturated
fats. Here is a list of diet changes that can help lower your cholesterol.
- Limit daily cholesterol to 300 mg or less. Cholesterol is
found in liver, egg yolks, shrimp, lobster and caviar.
- Calculate how much fat you should have a day. Estimate how
many calories you eat, multiply by .30, and then divide the number of fat
calories by nine (calories per gram) to get the actual fat grams you should
not exceed a day. For example, let's say you hold your weight at 2000 calories
a day. Thirty percent of 2000 calories is 600 fat calories. 600 fat calories
divided by 9 calories per gram is 67 fat grams a day. Get a fat gram counter,
read labels, and track your fat gram intake for a week. You quickly will find
where to make different food choices. Remember, less than 10 percent fat in
the diet is not healthy either.
- Limit saturated fats. These fats add
to the artery-clogging problem. Saturated fats are mostly found in animal
fat, such as lard, butter, beef fat and cream. Use the leanest cuts of meat,
avoid the skin of poultry, and use skim or low fat milk, yogurt and cheese.
- Avoid tropical oils such as palm, palm kernel and coconut
oils. These highly saturated oils are not sold separately, but they are hidden
in coffee creamers, whipped toppings, commercial baked goods and chocolate
candy.
- Increase monounsaturated fats such as olive oil and canola
oil. These fats lower LDL cholesterol.
- Use polyunsaturated fats, like corn oil, safflower oil, soybean
and sunflower seed oil, to lower your total cholesterol by substituting them
for saturated fats. All of these fats must fit within your 30 percent allotment.
- Avoid trans fatty acids -- these are a type of fat created
when the food chemists take liquid oils and partially hydrogenate them to
make then solid -- like brick margarine. Some can be
found in commercial baked goods, fried foods, and prepared convenience foods.
Margarine that is "trans-free" is your best choice, even over butter.
- Increase fish intake to get Omega-3 fatty
acids. The oil in fatty fish is protective. Include more salmon, tuna,
blue fish, sardines, herring and mackerel in your diet. Limit red meat to
9 ounces a week or less.
- Increase fibre in your diet, especially
soluble fibre. Remember the oat bran craze? Oats offer cholesterol-lowering
properties, along with other soluble fibre foods such as legumes, lentils,
barley, and vegetables and fruits such as apples, pears, plums, oranges and
grapefruit. These reduce the fat and cholesterol that enter your body and
help eliminate bile salts.
- Strive to be at your ideal weight. Even a five to 10 pound
weight loss can show an improvement in your blood cholesterol.
- Increase the use of fruits and vegetables for their antioxidant
benefits. Antioxidants protect the arteries of the heart from accumulating
plaque. Many cardiologists recommend vitamin E 400 Iu and vitamin C 250mg.
High doses of beta-carotene remains questionable. Continue eating colourful
fruits and vegetables such as sweet potatoes, dark green leafy vegetables,
squash and broccoli.
- Get enough folic acid. Low folic acid levels cause a rise
in homocustein, which is a negative factor in heart disease. Researchers recommend
400 micrograms a day. Folic acid is found in spinach, orange juice, fortified
bread and cereal, peanuts, beans and wheat germ.
- Exercise will decrease bad cholesterol and increase the good
cholesterol.
- The active ingredients in garlic are proving to lower cholesterol.
Use garlic generously in cooking.
- There is a range of diets offered to lower cholesterol. In
addition to the American Heart Association, Dean Ornish proposes a very low-fat
vegetarian diet plan, and others promote the Mediterranean Diet. All suggest
less saturated fat and cholesterol and more fruits and vegetables.
- If you're working to clean your arteries of cholesterol,
you already know what foods to get rid.But do you know the foods you should
add? Here is a list of cholesterol fighters guaranteed to work for you: 100
percent bran cereal, oat bran, apples, oranges, bananas, eggplant( Aubergines),
alfalfa,salmon,sunflower seeds, yoghurt, skim milk, dry curd, beans, onions
and raw green peepers. And don't forget your brewer's yeast.
Good luck. Perhaps a healthy diet can reduce your need for medication.
Give it a try.