Add a Comment

Lower Your Cholesterol

Ten ways to get the numbers down.

No doubt you've heard it a thousand times by now: Heart disease is the number one killer among both men and women. And about half of all adults in America have cholesterol levels that are too high--which means there's a good chance yours are. If you haven't had them checked lately, don't ignore it any longer.

Cholesterol, the naturally occurring waxy substance produced by your body, isn't a bad thing--unless you have too much of the bad kind. Then it contributes to the formation of artery-clogging plaque, increasing your risk of heart disease and stroke.

Bad kind? That's right. You have two main types of cholesterol: Low-density lipoprotein, or LDL (the “bad” cholesterol), and high-density lipoprotein, or HDL (the “good” cholesterol). LDL carries cholesterol into your arteries, and HDL carries it away to your liver. Needless to say, the less LDL and the more HDL you have the better. Beyond that basic fact, other details matter too, like the size of your LDL particles. Smaller, denser LDL particles are more dangerous because it's easier for them to burrow into artery walls.

If you have high cholesterol, your doctor may put you on cholesterol-lowering medication. But even if he does, pay special attention to the tips in this chapter. Because research suggests that by eating the right foods, getting enough exercise, and generally taking good care of yourself, you could slash your risk of dying from heart disease by an incredible 80 percent.

1. Drink two glasses of orange juice every morning. But make it Minute Maid's HeartWise or another brand spiked with the same kind of cholesterol-lowering plant sterols found in margarine spreads like Benecol. When researchers at the University of California-Davis asked 72 men and women with mildly high cholesterol to drink either HeartWise or regular OJ, those drinking the sterol-fortified juice found their total cholesterol levels dropped 7 percent (an average of 13 points) and levels of “bad” LDL cholesterol dropped 13 percent (an average of 8 points). Those who drank regular juice had no changes. But maybe they weren't drinking enough: Another study, this one from the University of Western Ontario, found that three glasses a day of orange juice--any orange juice--for four weeks raised HDL levels 21 percent and improved the ratio of good to bad cholesterol by 16 percent.

2. Eat six or more small meals a day. A large study of British adults found that people who ate six or more times a day had significantly lower cholesterol than those who ate twice a day, even though the “grazers” got more calories and fat! In fact, the differences in cholesterol between the two groups were large enough to reduce the grazers' risk of coronary heart disease 10-20 percent. Just make sure those six meals are truly small.

3. Quaff a glass of wine every evening with dinner. Studies find a daily glass of wine or beer a day can boost levels of HDL cholesterol. Make the wine a red one--red wines are 3-10 times higher in plant compounds called saponins believed to be responsible for much of wine's beneficial effects on cholesterol.

4. Fix all your sandwiches on whole grain bread. Simply cutting back on simple carbs like white bread and eating more complex carbs, like whole grain bread and brown rice, can increase HDL levels slightly and significantly lower triglycerides, another type of blood fat that contributes to heart disease.

5. Use paper filters when brewing your coffee and skip the espresso. Two substances found in brewed coffee, kahweol and cafestol, increase cholesterol levels. But paper filters trap these compounds, so they're only a problem if you drink espresso or use coffeemakers without filters.

6. Use olive oil in your homemade salad dressing tonight. A Baylor College of Medicine study found that diets rich in the kind of monounsaturated fat found in olive oil reduced LDL cholesterol in people with diabetes or metabolic syndrome--a cluster of risk factors including low HDL, high insulin levels, and overweight--just as well as following a low-fat diet.

7. Sip a cup of black tea every four hours. Government scientists found that three weeks of drinking five cups a day of black tea reduced cholesterol levels in people with mildly high levels.

8. Add half a tablespoon of cinnamon to your coffee beans (ground or whole) before starting the pot. A Pakistani study found that 6 grams cinnamon a day (about 1/2 tablespoon) reduced LDL cholesterol in people with type 2 diabetes nearly 30 percent and cut total cholesterol 26 percent.

9. Have oatmeal for breakfast every morning. There's a reason oat manufacturers are allowed to boast about the grain's cholesterol-lowering benefits: Plenty of research has proved them. Rich in a soluble fiber called beta glucan, oatmeal can drop your LDL 12-24 percent if you eat one and a half cups regularly. Choose quickcooking or old-fashioned oats over instant.

10. This week, have a few glasses of cranberry juice every day (cut it with seltzer or water so you get less sugar). Cranberries are rich sources of anthocyanins, flavonols, and proanthocyanidins, plant chemicals that prevent LDL cholesterol from oxidizing, a process that makes it more likely to stick to artery walls. These chemicals also keep red blood cells from getting too sticky. An added bonus:They initiate a complex chemical reaction that helps blood vessels relax. Plus (the part you were waiting for) they decrease LDL cholesterol levels. Not only that, but University of Scranton researchers reported that three glasses of cranberry juice a day can raise HDL levels up to 10 percent.

Want to eat healthier? We have you covered.


From Reader's Digest Stealth Health. Buy this and other books at the Reader's Digest Store.

Comments
susan 
Aug. 20, 2009 12:23 pm
Thanks, I can do some of these.Don't like any brown breads though, don't drink on too much meds andcan't ,I will try the coffee filter trick and also the tea,and I eat like a bird anyway so I will try to eat 6 small meals.I drink lots of water.And I can do the oatmeal & oj. also...Hope it works..My good & bad cholesterol levels are too high and dr.wants to put me on meds.but I said Let me try to get it down my self first.He's giving me 3 months ..
 
Daisie Laflamme 
Sep. 11, 2009 4:28 pm
This is a great thing to have! Since my dad had his incident in 2005, I've had a bland life- in terms of food.
 
jackie 
Jan. 7, 2010 5:58 am
Thank you i bcame so frustrated in mkng my husbands lunch he lov sandwhichs any idea w/hi choles.
 
mizliz 
Jan. 8, 2010 8:44 am
I stopped Vitorin and opted for trying to lower it with bike riding and proper diet...Had a letter from my Attend.Phy. at Baylor Woman's Clinic saying the cholesterol had improved greatly...almost a year of the above.
 
Lassi Eronen 
Jan. 11, 2010 2:23 am
Important note: Encouraging people to drink more cranberry juice is a good thing AS LONG AS they are not using blood thinning medication as Warfarin; otherwise cranberry might increase the risk of bleeding.
 
qbtiger 
Jan. 15, 2010 12:10 pm
These are all great Ideas but don't forget the importance of exercise!! I started running and after 1 month my ldl went down and my hdl went up. I also added Danacol to my diet and I believe that helped but exercise is the key.
 
Pamie D. 
Jan. 16, 2010 4:37 am
A little while ago, our family decided to "eat to live" not "live to eat". We don't eat anything, and I mean anything that has hydrogenated oils....ever. We've given up Oreos and Doritos a long time ago. The food manufacturers don't care one bit about you, only their bottom line, so, read the labels, in fact, try to cut out boxed foods all together!!
 
kevin 
Jan. 21, 2010 7:03 pm
great info on cutting my ldls
 
Jan. 26, 2010 7:23 pm
Interesting, but I'm wondering about the quantities of juice recommended. There is so much sugar in juice and if you are trying to lose weight and keep your blood sugar levels normal, how can you do this while consuming several glasses of orange or cranberry juice every day??
 
HB Sue Supporting Member (Click to learn more about Supporting Membership)
Jan. 29, 2010 12:04 pm
Great info. but I have high LDL and really great HDL with a good differential. Wondering if I should be on a special diet.
 
Fauxreal 
Feb. 4, 2010 5:28 am
If you are on a renal diet - some of these are not best options. Educate yourself before any diet changes, talk to your doctor. It's up to you to be informed! Good luck!
 
Feb. 9, 2010 10:56 pm
Well, not so fast everybody. Cloudfall1 has a good point. I'm diabetic & there's no way I could drink that much fruit juice in a day w/o getting high blood sugars. Although I have found a diet cranberry juice. I will try some of the other suggestions though.
 
Minkey 
Feb. 13, 2010 9:18 pm
I agree with others--talk to your doctor or nutritionist first. Diabetics cannot drink that much juice, even if there is no sugar added. Also, if you are already taking cholesterol lowering medication, avoid grapefruit juice as it inhibits the drug and can cause a build up of the drug in your kidneys. Other good ideas involve Not adding sweets and milks to your oatmeal but tying it with fruit or nuts. And, since when is it a good idea to recommend daily alcohol? There are tons out there who do not drink at all or should not be drinking regularly. Some of them have difficult to control alcoholic tendencies, too. Isn't there some kind of resver...something that gives you the benefits of red wine without having to drink it? Otherwise, great article. I liked the comment about getting exercise and changing diet to do the cholesterol-lowering trick--good job! Come to think of it, when I look at the diets of the average person, I think a lot of these changes can make a real and positive difference.
 
Feb. 19, 2010 3:15 pm
All I have to say is many Thank you's for this information I already do 5 out of the 10 tips for my high cholestoral, diabetes and metabolic syndrome. I have many health issues at a young 47 years old and have been looking for some good tips to try and keep from having a short life. Doctors havent been all that helpful or hopeful in giving me medical information to add to my healthy eating.
 
Ladiej 
Feb. 20, 2010 11:21 am
Thanks alot i will try them all. I lost my job in late Oct. and Ive gain over 20 pounds. Very stressed and depressed. Now looking for good things to get this weight off the healthy way.
 
Feb. 22, 2010 7:59 am
Thank you very much for putting this in here. Some of it, I do now. But I know to do it all, or at least try it very often just so I can try to keep myself if a type of good shape. Thanks again for the things I've never heard about.
 
GRANDB25 
Mar. 5, 2010 7:58 am
I didn't know about the orange juice. Thanks for the tip. My husband and I will be trying this.
 
Pam 
Mar. 17, 2010 5:16 am
In 2009 my MD recommended that I eliminate animal-product foods from my diet and eat more plant-based foods. I have reduced the animal-product foods about 75% and have increased the plant-based foods. Since changing my eating habits, I've lost weight, reduced my cholesterol, and I'm no longer considered border-line diabetic. According to a medical article I read, health benefits include prevention of major illnesses such as cancer, heart disease and adult onset of diabetes. Hope this helps you improve your health. It sure helped me.
 
Melissa 
Mar. 29, 2010 7:16 am
All this is great, but after being stabbed in June '08. I lost a kidney & can't take drugs for the cholesterol. In fact, I'm really scared to take anything because my Dr. said to lose 100 lbs which will put me down to 120 lbs. I started juicing every morning because Juices from the stores are full of preservatives & sodium. I use the Jack Lalane juicer & it's the best!! I used this recipe & had so much energy, I was getting things done & had energy for 12 hours. No crashes & it only made me eat healthy. I lost my business when the oilfield went defunk last year. I got off of fresh juice & have been gaining weight again & went into depression like so many people. The recipe is: 2 apples, 1 orange (peeled)or tangelo, 2 carrots, handful of blueberries or strawberries (or both) . I started drinking again so I'm going to start juicing everyday again & walking for 3 miles & running a 1/4 mile. I'm 52 & now that the weather is getting warm, I'm off down the road.
 
erika 
May 1, 2010 8:06 am
Drinking red wine every day at dinner may be god for theheart, but bad for your liver.
 
ida pachinsky 
May 20, 2010 6:21 am
On orange juice, the author is pushing minute maid, maybe they get a kick back. It is the chemical added to the Minute Maid OJ that is important, not the oj. It is Omega 3 which as been shown to reduce bad cholesterol and increase good numbers. You can find it in foods or quick in pills without all those horrible sugar calories. OJ is not a beverage. It is a high calorie sugar product. Eat oranges with fiber and take omega 3. It is probably cheaper too.
 
Brenda77 
May 23, 2010 8:24 am
I too was told my Dr. wants to put me on meds and I said whoa, wait a minute, why not let me try it first w/o the meds??? So I too have 3 months. Please, if u find any recipes could u send me an email? b_j1222@hotmail.com. good luck to u!!
 
mshawnharris 
Oct. 27, 2010 11:43 am
What is 'old fashioned' oats? Is that walking out into a field in a leather loin cloth and grazing?
 
mdzj80 
Jan. 12, 2011 7:40 am
No matter what the commercials tell you, there is a difference between corn syrup and natural sugar. Mind you I'm talking drinking 100% juice and not juice drinks (usually about 15% juice). Also if you are able, eat the fruit instead of drinking, both generally have the same amount of sugar, but eating will slow down the process of it going into your blood, etc. so your body will have better resources to digest and process instead of storing. Don't even forget about the much needed vitamins!
 
Jan. 23, 2011 8:31 am
I agree mdzj80, there definitely is a difference between high fructose corn syrup (what commercials are saying is corn sugar) and natural cane sugar. The high amount of fructose in high fructose corn syrup bypasses a critical step in metabolism, allowing it to be shuttled into different pathways. This has been linked to fatty liver disease, where fat accumulates in your liver and can progress to much more serious health effects. Also, mshawnharris, old fashioned oats are not processed like quick-cooking or instant oats and therefore have more fiber, which is key to lowering cholesterol.
 
Jan. 23, 2011 8:33 am
Probably one glass of red wine with dinner is okay. It is only bad for your liver if you start drinking 2-3 drinks per day. There are standards amounts that doctors will classify the amount of alcohol that is acceptable for your liver, so if you want to drink red wine at dinner it's probably best to ask first.
 
vegmomfeedsmeateaters 
Mar. 3, 2011 12:07 pm
I'm alreading having my daily dosis of orange juice and tea, and wouldn't mind to add the wine to my daily routine
 
jarednchrissy 
May 23, 2011 11:39 am
I don't drink tea or alcohol. Do you have anything that could substitute for these (like maybe grapejuice for the wine)? Thanks.
 
Sep. 26, 2011 5:17 am
Oats really are a proven super food, not just for cholesterol, but also to control your blood sugar levels and your blood pressure. I have found that because all of mine are normal (save for high BP during highly stressful situations) oats lowers my sugar levels so much that I need a second meal less than one hour after breakfast. For some one with high blood sugar, it's very good though.
 
 

recipe box See something worth saving?
Register now to save all your favorites in your Recipe Box.

Sign up for FREE Now!

ADVERTISEMENT

Related Videos

How to Cook Eggplant

Watch how to prepare and cook this extremely versatile vegetable.

Most Popular Blogs

Read our allrecipes.com blog

 
Select Your Version:  Argentina  |  Australia & New Zealand  |  Brazil  |  Canada  |  China  |  France  |  Germany  |  India  |  Japan  |  Korea  |  Mexico  |  Netherlands  |  Poland

Quebec  |  Russia  |  SE Asia  |  United Kingdom & Ireland  |  United States