Rueben

Diet & Cholesterol Level

Asked by Rueben 
30 Mar 2012

My Cardio rehab nurse has told me that because i have FH i can probably only lower my cholesterol level by about 10% by dietary means and that exercise and statins are the main ways i can lower my cholesterol level. Strange? Any info anyone please? Only a newbie so sorry if i am covering old ground. Thanks.

Traci
30 Mar 2012
Hi Rueben,
That is pretty standard really, dietary changes will make only a small difference to your overall levels if you have FH. That is why when you are diagnosed your Doctor will really push statin therapy.
Drs will of course still push diet and exercise as a healthy lifestyle is better for your overall health.
Hope this helps :)
Traci

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DakCB-UK
30 Mar 2012
Now that's interesting. A couple of us in other discussions thought we made a 25% cut by diet (including stanols/sterols) but I guess it depends how your diet was before. Mine wasn't exactly healthy...

Statins are the fashionable medication at the moment, but there are others if they cause you problems, or at least one non-drug procedure (apheresis) which scares the bejesus out of me.

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Concerned
14 Apr 2012
I appreciate you don't like unsubstantiated hand-waving; you may want to look at this book if you get an opportunity
www.fathead-movie.com/index...

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DakCB-UK
15 Apr 2012
I guess you mean www.fathead-movie.com/index... - curiously, rather than some of the more extreme claims, the review summarises it as "guess what the evidence Evans has compiled shows: it’s not the fat in our diets that causes heart disease; it’s the sugars, refined carbohydrates, processed vegetables oils and other garbage" and I think if you follow a late 80s low-sat-fat/healthy heart diet, it basically tends towards lean meat or other protein sources and wholefoods, (with a few since-disproved things like restricting egg yolk intake, I admit) and it's fairly low in those things too. So I suspect that more conservative summary is possible. You place your bets as you think best...

However, I'm not wild about any deliberately lopsided book. And do any of the studies consider the atypical FH reactions?

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Cindy-Evans
31 Mar 2012
I'm having Apheresis and it really should be last resort. Healthy diet can make a big difference for some and I know of people who dropped it by 50% so always worth a think.

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marton
31 Mar 2012
dear Rueben
Was diagnosed with FH 20 years ago. Chol. was 12. before going on statins reduced it to 9 by low fat diet......I make that 25%.

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Rueben
2 Apr 2012
Thank you everybody for your interesting replies.
Nice guidelines(the ones GP's follow) state targets of Total chol under 5 and LDL under 3 whereas the Cardiovascular society recommend Total chol under 4, HDL above 1, LDL under 2 and tryglyc under 2. My levels are: Total chol=5.1 HDL=1.4 LDL=3.2 Tryglyc=1.2. I have a strict diet, do regular exercise, am well within my BMI and take Simvastatin but i do not seem to be able to get my levels down any lower no matter how hard i try!
Any advice please. Thank you.

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Aliwally
2 Apr 2012
Hello Rueben,
Is it your medical team that want you to get your levels lower? The Cardiovascular figures are (I think) are for people with diabetes or those who have already had an event, because they are deemed to be at higher risk.
Personally, I would say that there is nothing more you can do about it other than what you are doing.
Sometimes I get annoyed with the attitude that it is the patient's fault and if only they did x,y or z things would be different, but this may not be how it is in your case.

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Rueben
2 Apr 2012
Hi Aliwally, thanks for your reply.
I do not have diabetes but have FH and have had a bad(is there a good one) heart attack and quad bypass. My GP is quite happy with my chol levels, it is my cardio rehab team who say it would be better if i could get my chol levels to within the Cardiovascular society recommended limits. I try to oblige where my life is at risk!

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