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Cholesterol

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Cholesterol & Statins. The Oiling of America. The Oiling of Americaby Mary Enig, PhD, and Sally Fallon In 1954 a young researcher from Russia named David Kritchevsky published a paper describing the effects of feeding cholesterol to rabbits.1 Cholesterol added to vegetarian rabbit chow caused the formation of atheromas—plaques that block arteries and contribute to heart disease. Cholesterol is a heavy weight molecule—an alcohol or a sterol—found only in animal foods such as meat, fish, cheese, eggs and butter. In the same year, according to the American Oil Chemists Society, Kritchevsky published a paper describing the beneficial effects of polyunsaturated fatty acids for lowering cholesterol levels.2 Polyunsaturated fatty acids are the kind of fats found in large amounts in highly liquid vegetable oils made from corn, soybeans, safflower seeds and sunflower seeds.

Rise of Coronary Heart Disease in the 20th Century Scientists of the period were grappling with a new threat to public health—a steep rise in heart disease. Dr. Doctors Ignore Proven Alternative To Coronary Stents and Bypass Surgery. A unique opportunity to save countless lives and billions of dollars is being overlooked by the medical community. This technique increases blood flow to the heart, strengthens the circulation, and offers a proven way to treat heart disease in lieu of stents or bypass surgery. Enhanced external counterpulsation (EECP) is a safe, non-invasive procedure that can overcome heart disease in two ways—by passively exercising the heart to strengthen the vascular system and by targeting inflammation, the underlying culprit in damaged blood vessels that inhibits blood flow.

More than 100 studies have demonstrated its overwhelming effectiveness and unquestioned safety in improving blood flow in patients with heart disease. Some experts are calling for the EECP procedure to become first-line therapy for heart disease, long before surgery or other invasive procedures are used. Imagine this scenario. An All-Too-Common Scenario But is it really the best option? Too Good to be True? According to Dr. Dr. Sugarcane Extract Superior To Cholesterol-Lowering Drugs? 579.full.

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Is the use of cholesterol in mortality risk algorithms in clinical guidelines valid? Ten years prospective data from the Norwegian HUNT 2 study - Petursson - 2011 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice. Lower Cholesterol Safely: Nutritional Interventions for Healthy Lipids. Are statin drugs right for you? At Life Extension®, we have long maintained that one’s decision to take a particular drug should be based on individual blood test findings. For blood lipids, we recommend members seek to achieve the following optimal ranges: Statin drugs lower LDL and total cholesterol, but have only a modest effect on boosting artery-cleansing HDL. Statin drugs do not lower triglycerides. Physicians often rely solely on high-dose statin drug therapy to achieve desired blood lipid readings. One problem with this approach is that side effects elevate markedly as the dose of the statin drug is increased.

While you should take all necessary steps to protect heart health—which may include cholesterol-lowering medications—high-dose statins are often unnecessary. In this article, we explore a novel set of natural lipid-lowering compounds shown to support healthy cholesterol levels. Together they provide a potent, complementary alternative to prescription statin drugs.

Stephanie Seneff on Sulfur.