14 Ways To Decrease Your Bad Cholesterol Level
If
you are looking for a natural way to decrease your cholesterol
additionally to controlling what you eat and working out there are tones
of dietary supplements on the market that claim to do the trick. But
just because your aunt says a supplement did miracles on her cholesterol
does not mean it will work for you. In fact, her success might be due
to a diet overhaul she neglected to mention or a placebo effect. Here is
real cholesterol lowering tricks you can use to achieve your goal.
Oats
An easy first step to improve your
cholesterol is eating a bowl of oatmeal or cold oat based cereal like
Cheerios for breakfast. It gives you about two grams of soluble fiber.
Add a banana or even strawberries for another half gram. Current
nutrition studies recommend getting 15 to 30 grams of fiber per day,
with at least 10 to 15 grams coming from soluble fiber.
Barley and other whole grains
Like oat bran and oats, barley and other
whole grains can help lower the risk of heart disease, mainly due to
the soluble fiber they deliver.
Beans
Beans are extremely rich in soluble
fiber. They also take awhile for your body to digest, causing you feel
full for longer after a meal. That is one reason beans are a useful food
for people trying to lose weight. With so many choices from kidney and
navy beans to black eyed, garbanzos, lentils peas and so many ways to
prepare them, beans are a very diverse food.
Okra and eggplant
Nuts
A lot of studies show that an intake of
nuts is good for your heart. Eating two ounces of nuts per day can
slightly lower LDL, on the order of 7%. Nuts have additional nutrients
that protect the heart in other ways.
Veggie oils
Using liquid vegetable oils such as
safflower, sunflower, canola and others in place of lard, butter or
shortening while cooking or at the serving helps lower LDL.
Grapes, apples, strawberries and citrus fruits
These fruits are rich in a type of soluble fiber that lowers LDL so called as pectin.
Foods full of stanols and sterols
Stanols and sterols extracted from
plants gum up the ability of your body to absorb cholesterol from food.
Companies add them to foods ranging from granola bars and margarine to
chocolate and orange juice. They also are available as supplements.
Getting two grams of plant sterols or stanols per day can lower LDL
cholesterol by about 12%.
Soy
Fatty fish
Eating fish 2 or 3 times a week can lower LDL in 2 ways:
1. By replacing meat that has fats boosting saturated LDL.
2. By delivering omega 3 LDL lowering fats. Omega reduces triglycerides in your bloodstream and also protects the heart by preventing the onset of abnormal heart rhythms.
1. By replacing meat that has fats boosting saturated LDL.
2. By delivering omega 3 LDL lowering fats. Omega reduces triglycerides in your bloodstream and also protects the heart by preventing the onset of abnormal heart rhythms.
Fiber supplements
Supplements offer the least appealing way to get soluble fiber. 2 teaspoons a day of psyllium- found in Metamucil and other bulk forming laxatives provide about four grams of soluble fiber.
Saturated fats
The saturated fat accruing in red meat,
milk, other dairy products, coconut and palm oils directly boosts LDL.
One way to lower levels of LDL is to slow down eating of saturated fat.
Try substituting ground beef for regular; low-fat or skim milk for whole
milk; olive oil or a vegetable-oil margarine for butter; baked fish or
chicken for fried.
Trans fats
Trans fats boost LDL as much as
saturated fats do. They also lower protective HDL, up inflammation and
increase the tendency for blood clots to form inside your blood vessels.
It is recommended to get no more than 2 grams of trans fats every day
and less is much better.
Weight and exercise
Excess weight and not exercising affect
circulating of bloodstream fats. Being overweight boosts harmful LDL,
while inactivity decreases “good’’ HDL. Lose weight if needed and
exercise more to reverse these trends.
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