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Mark Hyman, MD

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Why Cholesterol May Not Be the Cause Of Heart Disease

Posted: 09/20/09 09:02 AM ET

We have all been led to believe that cholesterol is bad and that lowering it is good. Because of extensive pharmaceutical marketing to both doctors and patients we think that using statin drugs is proven to work to lower the risk of heart attacks and death.

But on what scientific evidence is this based, what does that evidence really show?

Roger Williams once said something that is very applicable to how we commonly view the benefits of statins. "There are liars, damn liars, and statisticians."

We see prominent ads on television and in medical journals -- things like 36% reduction in risk of having a heart attack. But we don't look at the fine print. What does that REALLY mean and how does it affect decisions about who should really be using these drugs.

Before I explain that, here are some thought provoking findings to ponder.

• If you lower bad cholesterol (LDL) but have a low HDL (good cholesterol) there is no benefit to statins. (i)

• If you lower bad cholesterol (LDL) but don't reduce inflammation (marked by a test called C-reactive protein), there is no benefit to statins. (ii)

• If you are a healthy woman with high cholesterol, there is no proof that taking statins reduces your risk of heart attack or death. (iii)

• If you are a man or a woman over 69 years old with high cholesterol, there is no proof that taking statins reduces your risk of heart attack or death. (iv)

• Aggressive cholesterol treatment with two medications (Zocor and Zetia) lowered cholesterol much more than one drug alone, but led to more plaque build up in the arties and no fewer heart attacks. (v)

• 75% of people who have heart attacks have normal cholesterol

• Older patients with lower cholesterol have higher risks of death than those with higher cholesterol. (vi)

• Countries with higher average cholesterol than Americans such as the Swiss or Spanish have less heart disease.

• Recent evidence shows that it is likely statins' ability to lower inflammation it what accounts for the benefits of statins, not their ability to lower cholesterol.

So for whom do the statin drugs work for anyway? They work for people who have already had heart attacks to prevent more heart attacks or death. And they work slightly for middle-aged men who have many risk factors for heart disease like high blood pressure, obesity, or diabetes.

So why did the 2004 National Cholesterol Education Program guidelines expand the previous guidelines to recommend that more people take statins (from 13 million to 40 million) and that people who don't have heart disease should take them to prevent heart disease. Could it have been that 8 of the 9 experts on the panel who developed these guidelines had financial ties to the drug industry? Thirty-four other non-industry affiliated experts sent a petition to protest the recommendations to the National Institutes of Health saying the evidence was weak. It was like having a fox guard the chicken coop.

It's all in the spin. The spin of the statistics and numbers. And it's easy to get confused. Let me try to clear things up.

When you look under the hood of the research data you find that the touted "36% reduction" means a reduction of the number of people getting heart attacks or death from 3% to 2% (or about 30-40%).

And that data also shows that treatment only really works if you have heart disease already. In those who DON'T have documented heart disease, there is no benefit.

In those at high risk for heart disease about 50 people would need to be treated for 5 years to reduce one cardiovascular event. Just to put that in perspective: If a drug works, it has a very low NTT (number needed to treat). For example, if you have a urine infection and take an antibiotic, you will get near a 100% benefit. The number needed to treat is "1". So if you have an NTT of 50 like statins do for preventing heart disease in 75% of the people who take them, it is basically a crap shoot.

Yet at a cost of over $28 billion a year, 75% of all statin prescriptions are for exactly this type of unproven primary prevention. Simply applying the science over 10 years would save over $200 billion. This is just one example of reimbursed but unproven care. We need not only prevent disease but also prevent the wrong type of care.

If these medications were without side effects, then you may be able to justify the risk - but they cause muscle damage, sexual dysfunction, liver and nerve damag,e and other problems in 10-15% of patients who take them. Certainly not a free ride.

So if lowering cholesterol is not the great panacea that we thought, how do we treat heart disease, and how do we get the right kind of cholesterol - high HDL, low LDL and low triglycerides and have cholesterol particles that are large, light and fluffy rather than small, dense and hard, which is the type that actually causes heart disease and plaque build up.

We know what causes the damaging small cholesterol particles. And it isn't fat in the diet. It is sugar. Sugar in any form or refined carbohydrates (white food) drives the good cholesterol down, cause triglycerides to go up, creates small damaging cholesterol particles, and causes metabolic syndrome or pre-diabetes. That is the true cause of most heart attacks, NOT LDL cholesterol.

One of the reasons we don't hear about this is because there is no good drug to raise HDL. Statin drugs lower LDL -- and billions are spent advertising them, even though they are the wrong treatment.

If you're like most of the patients I see in my practice, you're convinced that cholesterol is the evil that causes heart disease. You may hope that if you monitor your cholesterol levels and avoid the foods that are purported to raise cholesterol, you'll be safe from America's number-one killer.

We are all terrified of cholesterol because for years well-meaning doctors, echoed by the media, have emphasized what they long believed is the intimate link between cholesterol and death by heart disease. If only it were so simple!

The truth is much more complex.

Cholesterol is only one factor of many -- and not even the most important -- that contribute to your risk of getting heart disease.

First of all, let's take a look at what cholesterol actually is. It's a fatty substance produced by the liver that is used to help perform thousands of bodily functions. The body uses it to help build your cell membranes, the covering of your nerve sheaths, and much of your brain. It's a key building block for our hormone production, and without it you would not be able to maintain adequate levels of testosterone, estrogen, progesterone and cortisol.

So if you think cholesterol is the enemy, think again. Without cholesterol, you would die.

In fact, people with the lowest cholesterol as they age are at highest risk of death. Under certain circumstances, higher cholesterol can actually help to increase life span.

To help clear the confusion, I will review many of the cholesterol myths our culture labors under and explain what the real factors are that lead to cardiovascular disease.

Cholesterol Myths

One of the biggest cholesterol myths out there has to do with dietary fat. Although most of us have been taught that a high-fat diet causes cholesterol problems, this isn't entirely true. Here's why: The type of fat that you eat is more important than the amount of fat. Trans fats or hydrogenated fats and saturated fats promote abnormal cholesterol, whereas omega-3 fats and monounsaturated fats actually improve the type and quantity of the cholesterol your body produces.

In reality, the biggest source of abnormal cholesterol is not fat at all -- it's sugar. The sugar you consume converts to fat in your body. And the worst culprit of all is high fructose corn syrup.

Consumption of high fructose corn syrup, which is present in sodas, many juices, and most processed foods, is the primary nutritional cause of most of the cholesterol issues we doctors see in our patients.

So the real concern isn't the amount of cholesterol you have, but the type of fats and sugar and refined carbohydrates in your diet that lead to abnormal cholesterol production.

Of course, many health-conscious people today know that total cholesterol is not as critical as the following:

• Your levels of HDL "good" cholesterol vs. LDL "bad" cholesterol

• Your triglyceride levels

• Your ratio of triglycerides to HDL

• Your ratio of total cholesterol to HDL

Many are also aware that there are different sizes of cholesterol particles. There are small and large particles of LDL, HDL, and triglycerides. The most dangerous are the small, dense particles that act like BB pellets, easily penetrating your arteries. Large, fluffy cholesterol particles are practically harmless--even if your total cholesterol is high. They function like beach balls and bounce off the arteries, causing no harm.

Another concern is whether or not your cholesterol is rancid. If so, the risk of arterial plaque is real.

Rancid or oxidized cholesterol results from oxidative stress and free radicals, which trigger a vicious cycle of inflammation and fat or plaque deposition under the artery walls. That is the real danger: When small dense LDL particles are oxidized they become dangerous and start the build up of plaque or cholesterol deposits in your arteries.

Now that we've explored when and how cholesterol becomes more problematic, let's take a look at other factors that play a more significant role in cardiovascular disease.

Prime Contributors to Cardiovascular Disease

First of all, cardiovascular illness results when key bodily functions go awry, causing inflammation, (vii) imbalances in blood sugar and insulin and oxidative stress.

To control these key biological functions and keep them in balance, you need to look at your overall health as well as your genetic predispositions, as these underlie the types of diseases you're most likely to develop. It is the interaction of your genes, lifestyle, and environment that ultimately determines your risks -- and the outcome of your life.

This is the science of nutrigenomics, or how food acts as information to stall or totally prevent some predisposed disease risks by turning on the right gene messages with our diet and lifestyle choices. That means some of the factors that unbalance bodily health are under your control, or could be.

These include diet, nutritional status, stress levels, and activity levels. Key tests can reveal problems with a person's blood sugar and insulin, inflammation level, level of folic acid, clotting factors, hormones, and other bodily systems that affect your risk of cardiovascular disease.

Particularly important are the causes if inflammation, which are many, and need to be assessed. Inflammation can arise from poor diet (too much sugar and trans and saturated fats), a sedentary lifestyle, stress, autoimmune disease, food allergies, hidden infections such as gum disease, and even toxins such as mercury. All of these causal factors need to be considered anytime there is inflammation.

Combined together, all of these factors determine your risk of heart disease. And I recommend that people undergo a comprehensive medical evaluation to see what their risk really is.

Zeroing in on Key Factors for Heart Disease

There's no doubt about it, inflammation is key contributor to heart disease. A major study done at Harvard found that people with high levels of a marker called C-reactive protein (CRP) had higher risks of heart disease than people with high cholesterol. Normal cholesterol levels were NOT protective to those with high CRP. The risks were greatest for those with high levels of both CRP and cholesterol.

Another predisposing factor to heart disease is insulin resistance or metabolic syndrome, which leads to an imbalance in the blood sugar and high levels of insulin. This may affect as many as half of Americans over age 65. Many younger people also have this condition, which is sometimes called pre-diabetes.

Although modern medicine sometimes loses sight of the interconnectedness of all our bodily systems, blood sugar imbalances like these impact your cholesterol levels too. If you have any of these conditions, they will cause your good cholesterol to go down, while your triglycerides rise, which further increases inflammation and oxidative stress. All of these fluctuations contribute to blood thickening, clotting, and other malfunctions -- leading to cardiovascular disease.

What's more, elevated levels of a substance called homocysteine (which is related to your body's levels of folic acid and vitamins B6 and B12) appears to correlate to cardiovascular illness. Although this is still somewhat controversial, I often see this inter-relationship in my practice. While genes may play a part, tests done as part of a comprehensive evaluation of cardiac risk can easily ascertain this factor. Where problematic levels occur, they can be easily addressed by adequate folic acid intake, along with vitamins B6 and B12.

Testing for Cardiovascular Risk Factors

Heart disease is not only about cholesterol. It is important to look at many factors that contribute to your overall risk. And it seems that insulin and blood sugar imbalances, and inflammation are proving to be more of a risk that cholesterol.

If you want to test your overall risk, you can consider asking your doctor to perform the following tests:

1. Total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, and triglycerides. Your total cholesterol should be under 200. Your triglycerides should be under 100. Your HDL should be over 60. Your LDL should be ideally under 80. Your ratio of total cholesterol to HDL should be less than 3.0. Your ratio of triglycerides to HDL should be no greater than 4, which can indicate insulin resistance if elevated.

2. NMR Lipid Profile. This looks at your cholesterol under an MRI scan to assess the size of the particles, which can determine your cardiovascular risk. This is a very important test that can further differentiate the risk of your cholesterol and can be an important factor to track as your system improves and your cholesterol transforms from being small dense and dangerous to light and fluffy and innocuous. It is done by a company called Liposcience and is also available through LabCorp.

3. Glucose Insulin Tolerance Test. Measurements of fasting and 1 and 2 hour levels of glucose AND insulin helps identify pre-diabetes and excessively high levels of insulin, and even diabetes. Most doctors just check blood sugar and NOT insulin, which is the first thing to go up. By the time your blood sugar goes up, the train has left the station.

4. Hemaglobin A1c. This measures your average blood sugar level over the last 6 weeks. Anything over 5.5 is high.

5. Cardio C-reactive protein. This is a marker of inflammation in the body that is essential to understand in the context of overall risk. Your C-reactive protein level should be less than 1.

6. Homocysteine. Your homocysteine measures your folate status and should be between 6 and 8.

7. Lipid peroxides or TBARS test, which looks at the amount of oxidized or rancid fat. This should be within normal limits of the test and indicates whether or not you have oxidized cholesterol.

8. Fibrinogen, which is another test looking at clotting in the blood. It should be less than 300.

9. Lipoprotein (a), which is another factor that can promote the risk of heart disease, often in men. It should be less than 30.

10. Genes or SNPs may also be useful in terms of assessing your situation. A number of key genes regulate cholesterol and metabolism, including Apo E genes and the cholesterol ester transfer protein gene. The MTHFR gene, which regulates homocysteine is also important and may be part of an overall workup.

11. Get a high-speed CT or (EBT) scan of the heart if you are concerned that you have cardiovascular disease. This may be helpful to assess overall plaque burden and calcium score. A score higher than 100 is a concern, and a score higher than 400 indicates severe risk of cardiovascular disease.

Next week I will review how to lower your risk of heart disease and fix your cholesterol. We'll do this not by lowering the LDL, but by getting more light and fluffy LDL particles, which are protective and more HDL cholesterol, which is THE most important cholesterol.

Now I'd like to hear from you...

Have you been told that you need to lower your cholesterol?

If so, what were your told to do and how does that compare to what you've read here?

Does any of what you've read here come as a surprise?

Please share your thoughts by adding a comment below.

To your good health,

Mark Hyman, M.D.

References

(i) Barter P, Gotto AM, LaRosa JC, Maroni J, Szarek M, Grundy SM, Kastelein JJ, Bittner V, Fruchart JC; Treating to New Targets Investigators. HDL cholesterol, very low levels of LDL cholesterol, and cardiovascular events. N Engl J Med. 2007 Sep 27;357(13):1301-10.

(ii) Ridker PM, Danielson E, Fonseca FA, Genest J, Gotto AM Jr, Kastelein JJ, Koenig W, Libby P, Lorenzatti AJ, MacFadyen JG, Nordestgaard BG, Shepherd J, Willerson JT, Glynn RJ; JUPITER Study Group. Rosuvastatin to prevent vascular events in men and women with elevated C-reactive protein. N Engl J Med. 2008 Nov 20;359(21):2195-207.

(iii) Abramson J, Wright JM. Are lipid-lowering guidelines evidence-based? Lancet. 2007 Jan 20;369(9557):168-9

(iv) IBID

(v) Brown BG, Taylor AJ Does ENHANCE Diminish Confidence in Lowering LDL or in Ezetimibe? Engl J Med 358:1504, April 3, 2008 Editorial

(vi) Schatz IJ, Masaki K, Yano K, Chen R, Rodriguez BL, Curb JD. Cholesterol and all-cause mortality in elderly people from the Honolulu Heart Program: a cohort study. Lancet. 2001 Aug 4;358(9279):351-5.

(vii) Hansson GK Inflammation, Atherosclerosis, and Coronary Artery Disease N Engl J Med 352:1685, April 21, 2005

Mark Hyman, M.D. practicing physician and founder of The UltraWellness Center is a pioneer in functional medicine. Dr. Hyman is now sharing the 7 ways to tap into your body's natural ability to heal itself. You can follow him on Twitter, connect with him on LinkedIn, watch his videos on Youtube and become a fan on Facebook.

 
 
 

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We have all been led to believe that cholesterol is bad and that lowering it is good. Because of extensive pharmaceutical marketing to both doctors and patients we think that using statin drugs is pro...
We have all been led to believe that cholesterol is bad and that lowering it is good. Because of extensive pharmaceutical marketing to both doctors and patients we think that using statin drugs is pro...
 
 
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01:12 PM on 10/20/2009
I received a call from my doctor today with news that was shocking! My total cholesterol is 423 and my triglycerides are 1063. I am 38 years old and have no other risk factors. This article makes me feel better about diet and exercise verses medication. Everyone in my family has high cholesterol and no one has heart problems.
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dsws
No owning ideas. Limit only commercial use.
08:17 PM on 10/08/2009
It's not just the already-had-a-heart-attack group that benefits from lower total cholesterol: "In 1998, the results of the Air Force/Texas Coronary Atherosclerosis Prevention Study (AFCAPS/TexCAPS) showed that cholesterol lowering in generally healthy people with average cholesterol levels reduced their risk for a first-time major coronary event by 37 percent."
http://www.nhlbisupport.com/chd1/why4.htm

As for the gain being small, heart attack is one of the top causes of death. Sure, in a given year only a small percentage of people die: life expectancies (except among the very old or very ill) are a decent number of years. If you go from having a stable 3%-per-year risk of death to having a stable 2%-per-year risk of death, you go from having a 33-year life expectancy to having a 50-year life expectancy. Of course the reality is more complicated, and the expected years of life gained are almost certainly less than the 16+ years that the simplified calculation gives. But even a five-year gain is worth a 15% chance of minor side effects and a one-in-fifteen-million chance of rhabdomyolysis.
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Chuck Bluestein
Always searching for latest health breakthrough
03:18 AM on 10/08/2009
This is a great article that takes into account all the latest information. It explains many things and it appears that he is not afraid to talk against drugs. There are many factors that influence cardiovascular health and it looks like he has covered all of them.
10:24 PM on 09/30/2009
If you are looking for a great tasting, balance nutrtional bars aiding cholesterol management, you might like to try the Kardea gourmet nutrition bars---1g plant sterols with soluble fiber to lower cholesterol. 7g protein and only 150 calories. Limited supply of free samples from customerservice@kardeanutrition.com.
12:59 PM on 09/25/2009
I have been too tired to accomplish anything and have become a couch potato over the last 8 weeks. My left arm and shoulder hurt and ache all the time. I also have other aches that don't compare to these. One day I just said out loud - the only thing different in my life is the new Zocor I am taking. The pain and tiredness seemed to start soon after.

I stopped taking it 2 days ago and have an appointment to see my doc in two weeks. I took Lipitor a couple of years ago and experienced pain in my leg muscles. Guess I can't take statins. Fresh fruits and veggies are my new friends!
07:02 AM on 09/27/2009
Dear Madam,

My husband had similar symptoms -- and worse -- from lipitor.

Dr. Hyman, thanks for your article. Perhaps we should all be lobbying to abolish the government subsidies for growing corn, which in reality become subsidies for high-fructose corn syrup?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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10:35 AM on 09/25/2009
Thank you so much for this article.

I have just been told I have high "bad" cholesterol. I have no history of heart problems in my family though.

If I get told I need drugs, I'll skip that waste of time and just stick to giving up smoking, exercise and diet (staying away from refined sugars etc.)

Thanks again.
01:50 AM on 09/25/2009
I love this article. It's so helpful. I have what is considered high cholesterol- overall 234. I am in incredibly good shape, healthy, happy low stress, etc. I eat well, not too much sugar, exercise, etc. I keep getting told by doctors to take drugs for this. I don't take meds at all. Not that I'm against it, but if I don't need it, what for?
12:21 AM on 09/25/2009
Good article. I had a stent put in in 2004 - no heart attack, just angina. I'm on statins but would like to get off. Also I take Naicin and it did raise my HDL, which is my only major problem. I take a coated full aspirin too. But I wonder what you think of these three substances. CoEnzyme Q-10 - seemed to boost my energy level and Arthur Agattson recommended it in his Heart book for those on statins. Also I take fish oil which seems to modulate my heart rhythm. But I could NOT loose any weight. Then recently I started taking resveratrol and it seems to cut my appetite - no food cravings and I've lost fat without a really strict diet. I can skip a meal and feel fine. I wonder what you think about it and reducing metabolic syndrome, stabilizing blood sugar, or facilitating burning fat stores.
08:41 PM on 09/24/2009
I'm a heart attack survivor and a 2008 graduate of the WomenHeart Science & Leadership Symposium for Women with Heart Disease at Mayo Clinic. After my heart attack, I was so utterly gobsmacked by what had just happened to me that if my cardiologist had ordered me to stand on my head and spit nickels twice a day, I would have done so gladly if it might prevent going through another heart attack.

He prescribed statins. I'm taking the statins. It's only in the past few months, however, that articles like yours have begun to raise frightening doubts for me. So what's a heart attack survivor to do?

And the more I learn about the pharmaceutical industry, their medical ghostwriting scandals, tainted research, bought-and-paid-for physicians, multi-billion $ drug sales, deliberate suppression of lethal side effect warnings - well, the sicker I feel - and this isn't the kind of sickness that there's a pill for.

Any drug that an otherwise healthy middle-aged person willingly takes every day for the rest of their lives must be a fantasy dream come true for Big Pharma.


Carolyn Thomas
http://www.ethicalnag.org
12:24 PM on 09/24/2009
Finally... The truth. My cholesterol was 430. The Doctor wanted to put me on statins. I said no way. I was 42 years old. I stopped drinking and changed my diet. Now I'm 46, my weight is effortlessly where I need it to be and my cholesterol is 230. I am happy with that.
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Anthony Anderson
12:17 PM on 09/24/2009
I bought into the cholesterol lie for a very long time, but realize that the study used to push that idea was seriously flawed and cherry picked.

The truth is, sat fat has NOTHING to do with heart disease. But something else does.

Look at the Weston Price work, heavy amounts of sat fat have nothing to do with clogged arteries, its ALL ABOUT REFINED (PROCESSED) CARBS! They will irritate the bloodstream which causes the body to lay down a thin layer of cholesterol to heal that infected (inflamed) area. People keep eating the junk, the body keeps laying down the healing cholesterol.

Get the calcium phosphates out of your bloodstream and magical things begin to happen. How do you get them out of your bloodstream? Eat NO refined carbs (starch or sugar) and eat lots of good quality non-poisoned coconut butter and animal butter. Grass fed though.

They have to bring this up soon...its not about eating animal fat. Sorry.
09:24 AM on 09/24/2009
After reading your article I was confused by your recommendations at the end. After downplaying the importance of cholesterol your recommendations seemed to place recommendations for total and LDL at lower levels then my own physician recommends.
12:22 PM on 09/23/2009
Thank you, thank you, thank you Huffington Post and Dr. Hyman.

It is wonderful that these drugs are exposed for what they really are, money makers for the drug industry.

It is evidence, once again that our government, which is supposed to be there to help us. It should be looking at prevention through the use of high taxes on high sugar and low nutrition foods that rob us of our health and our appetite for nutritional, life supporting foods.

The drug subsidy "given" to seniors during the bush administration and unfortunately agreed to by both democrats and republicans in congress ought to be repealed and replaced with a drug withdrawal program that promotes healthy food and healthy lifestyles. There is proof that changes to the health of seniors is still possible if the right choices are made. It appears drugs are not the change seniors need.
10:55 AM on 09/23/2009
I'm 53, male, quit smoking 15 years ago, drinking a year and a half ago. 4 months ago I was just over the "obese" line. I didn't exercise and had a lousy diet.Tests showed my cholesterol was high Well, I happened to see a video on meat production here in the U.S. I'd thought about vegetarianism for a long time but this clinched it for me. So I quit eating meat and poultry, and now only eat wild caught fish. No shellfish. I began to explore other types of vegetarian foods like tempeh, etc and I'm learning a whole new way to cook. I also cut out refined sugar, processed flour and other foods. And I joined the local gym and walk alot. I'm not a PETA member but my choice has has some great benefits: I've lost 18 pounds and am getting close to my goal of 25. I've had no breathing problems, and I feel much better. I'm working yet on building up my stamina and don't tire quite so easily. I don't take any statins. My blood pressure has lowered considerably and recent tests show my cholesterol is down to normal levels. All this because I took control of my own body and diet. I recommend cutting out, or cutting way back on meat and poultry, eating only wild caught fish with high omega-3 levels, and cutting refined and processed foods out completely. If not for ethical, at least for health reasons!
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TakeSake
The United States for All Americans
12:44 PM on 09/23/2009
Here are some of the "new" things I came to like after relearning my diet:
1) kim-chee
2) natto
3) vinegar
4) okura
5) tofu
6) squash (use everything - toast the seeds!)
7) tea
8) 85%+ dark chocolate (I know...)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vippy
Carpe Diem!
12:47 PM on 09/23/2009
My husband had a heart attack and a stent was put in. He was scheduled for a bypass but then
was postponed 3 times so he bought the book by Dr. Ornish "reversing a heart attack" and he
is living by those suggestions, diet, etc. So far so good. Even after having a bypass and not changing the lifestyle one can have another heart attack. He is now doing the chelation process
and hopefully, it will show success along with his lifestyle changes. I would never listen to the FDA, who is not your friend!
10:47 AM on 09/23/2009
Thank you again, Dr. Hyman, for providing the truth about these huge issues that affect millions of people in the U.S. Drugs are not the answer for high cholesterol, but why do mainstream doctors not seem to know this? They'd rather quickly write a prescription than walk their patients through dietary changes. More olive oil, fish, fruits and veggies, and whole grains will work wonders.
-Jennifer Schonborn, Holistic Nutrition Counselor
http://www.jenniferschonborn.com