Increasing your HDL level

This is a very useful thing for everyone, not just for PWDs. If you are a parent taking care of a CWD, you especially want to make sure you are helping yourself stay healthy too, so you can take care of your young one.

Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) builds up within the walls of your blood vessels, narrowing the passageways. For this reason, LDL is commonly referred to as the “bad” cholesterol.

High-density lipoprotein (HDL) helps remove other forms of cholesterol from your blood. For this reason, it is commonly referred to as the “good” cholesterol. Higher levels of HDL are associated with a lower risk of heart disease.

Increasing your HDL lowers the risk of heart disease, heart attack, and stroke.

HDL picks up excess cholesterol in your blood and takes it back to the liver where it’s broken down and removed from the body.

There are some foods you can eat to increase your HDL naturally:

  • Fatty fish
  • Olive oil
  • Certain nuts like walnuts, almonds, peanuts, pistachios, and Brazil nuts
  • Chia seeds
  • Avocado
  • Whole grains
  • Beans and legumes
  • Ground flaxseeds and flaxseed oil
  • High-fiber fruit
  • Red wine (Moderate amounts! Don’t go crazy! :wink:)

Also exercise can improve your HDL, but that is a different topic…

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Great info @Eric!
But don’t forget the lowly peanut!

https://www.webmd.com/cholesterol-management/features/nuts-help-lower-bad-cholesterol

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Doc, I got your nuts up there! :rofl:

3rd in the list. :wink:

But I can add walnuts…

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Also a Southern favorite–Pecans :yum:

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The only problem with Pecans, is they usually come in the form of a delicious pie. Pecan + Pie = not so healthy.

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@Chris Worse than that is sometimes you can only find them with a sugary/ honey glaze on them. I like to get a big bag of them or almonds at Costco to munch on.

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Aww, you are bringing back good memories now. When I was a grad student an emeritus professor used to have hungry grad students over to his house at harvest time and we got to cart away bushels of pecans for free. Paid to have them cracked and voila, bags and bags of free pecans. Yumm.

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Seriously? That’s a dream of mine come true. I desperately want a pecan tree, but I’d go broke trying to keep it alive. They’re very thirsty trees apparently! What a fun memory. Thanks for sharing!

EH used to eat a ton of raw nuts and then realized they were giving him canker sores. :frowning: so we don’t eat as many anymore. Pecans are softer it seems though, and so tasty, even not as pie. :wink:

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According to Wikipedia, Lowering LDL:
“Lifestyle[edit]
The most effective approach has been minimizing fat stores located inside the abdominal cavity (visceral body fat) in addition to minimizing total body fat.[48] Visceral fat, which is more metabolically active than subcutaneous fat, has been found to produce many enzymatic signals, e.g. resistin, which increase insulin resistance and circulating VLDL particle concentrations, thus both increasing LDL particle concentrations and accelerating the development of diabetes mellitus.”

SOURCE: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-density_lipoprotein

How is visceral fat measured?

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I don’t know that there’s a precise objective measure, but it’s what people are trying to capture with waist to hip ratio, which is a predictor of CVD risk (higher is bad—for women you want your hips to be decidedly bigger than your waist, for men you don’t want your waist to be much bigger than your hips). If you have a lot of visceral fat, you’ll have a gut—think of a classic beer belly and how that’s distributed, or the people who have much bigger bellies but not as much fat elsewhere, and that’s indicative of a riskier fat storage tendency. How you store your fat is genetic though (just like a lot of CVD risk)—some people store more as visceral and others don’t (and put more fat proportionately into thighs, hips, butt, etc). For people who do tend to store more of their fat as visceral fat, gaining weight is going to be more dangerous than for those who do not.

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Also, I was always someone who both has always had a very high HDL and HDL:total cholesterol ratio and did not seem to have much visceral fat (I take after the side of my family with big hips/butts and similar cholesterol numbers), until I started developing some insulin resistance, and then that shifted and I started getting more of a belly. Taking metformin fixed that for me, and I’m back mostly to my more usual shape.

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Wow…that’s interesting.

i am a nut myself so naturally i am drawn to all sorts. :wink:

just keep in mind that different nuts require different amounts of insulin, and b/c they are fatty, they tend to slow down digestion.

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We focus a lot on HDL but I did not know about peanuts!

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Are you familiar with the pie gate controversy ?

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What?

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peanuts are for elephants and bars

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And me:-)

I guess you could classify me in either category!

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hahaha. :wink:

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So an elephant walks into a bar…

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