More than you wanted to know about a little-understood but important aspect of diet and health, explained in a nontechnical manner, with oversimplifications abound.

Your cells need some kind of fuel to function. this fuel can only come (ultimately) from the outside world as food. AKA "diet". your blood carries the fuel to the cells so they can do their work. on most diets, the main fuel for cells is glucose, which the body derives from sugar or carbohydrates (which are basically sugar + some complexity).

on other diets, the main fuel for cells is fat. on these diets, fat/lipid particles are carried on little blood ferries called lipoproteins (the final "L" in LDL and HDL). LDL carries lipids _to_ your cells so they can use it, HDL carries unused lipids _away_ from your cells (to the liver) so they can be disposed of. (on both very high carb and very low carb diets, your cells will still use some amount of both glucose and fat for energy, but the ratio will change dramatically).

Naturally, if you have a lot of these ferries in your blood (because you are using fat as cell-fuel), your LDL and HDL counts ("total cholesterol") will be high on basic blood tests.

LDL - the ferries that carry fats to your cells to burn - come in two varieties:

- small + dense

- large + fluffy

both carry fuel to your cells, but the small/dense ones have an unfortunate side-effect of slamming into artery walls, penetrating them, and accidentally depositing their lipids there. This is the "plaque" of cardiovascular disease fame. The large, fluffy particles do not penetrate the arterial walls as readily - they bounce off and keep going on to their destinations. their effect on arterial plaque is not zero, but far less impactful than small, dense particles.

In either case, the HDL particles are always good: they remove excess lipids from the body. this is why HDL is "the good cholesterol". There are advanced blood tests available which measure particle size (so, like, an _acutally useful_ test), but odds are your doctor will refuse to order this test. Strange!

We didn't mention Triglycerides yet. Suffice it to say that more triglycerides = smaller, denser LDL particles = more arterial wall penetration = more cardiovascular risk. To finish off our triglycerides sidebar, the dietary patterns that increase triglycerides (bad!) are: excess calories from carbohydrates, added sugars and refined carbohydrates, low fiber intake, low omega-3 intake (especially in combination with excess seed oil intake), high trans fats consumption (more on trans fat in a moment).

Back to finish up cholesterol: this is why a diet that is high in _good fats_ (again, more in a moment) will increase "total cholesterol" - you have more fat boats fueling your cells - but doesn't indicate greater cardiovascular risk: because the large, fluffy particles are not damaging your arteries and the large number of HDL particles are protective!

Furthermore, if you reconsider the sidebar on triglycerides you'll notice that avoiding refined carbohydrates and sugars has the added effect of lowering triglycerides, which keeps the LDL particles even healthier. You'll often see the simple recommendation to keep the HDL/Triglycerides ratio high. this is why. HDL good, triglycerides bad.

We didn't even get into insulin sensitivity - one of the most important factors in metabolic health... another time.

A last word on dietary fat types: Not all fats are created equally. You can look into monounsaturated and polyunsaturated on your own, but I want to mention two others here: Trans fat and Saturated fat.

Trans fats mostly come from _artificial sources_, like processed vegetable or seed oils. most often found in ultra-processed, packaged foods. yuck. trans fat **lowers HDL, increases inflammation and increases proportion of small, dense LDL particles**. These are all the bad things we discussed above.

Saturated fat is mainly found in meat, dairy and coconut oil. It **increases LDL particle size and raises HDL**. These are the good things we discussed above.

So, yes, while someone's _total cholesterol_ may go up when eating saturated fats, it doesn't necessarily mean their cardiovascular risk has increased.

Now that you understand how cholesterol works, compare moderate saturated fat intake to eating a diet full of refined carbohydrates, sugars, processed vegetable/seed oils, and all the other items we explained above...

Ok really now, the **last** last word: the "cholesterol" you see on a food label has less impact on blood cholesterol than you thought. the details are too squirrely to go into here, but the takeway is: the fat content discussed above is the lion's share of the impact, with the number you see next to "cholesterol" on your food label having a negligible effect.

#diet #paleo #keto #health #healthstr #foodstr #carnivore #cholesterol

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Awesome πŸ‘ anything specific about ratios? So let’s say on a cave man or some what carnivore like diet? Does one still need fiber and a lot of veggies?

I'm: 1. Not an expert. 2. Not in the business of giving other people diet advice. But I can tell you what I do: something of a keto/Paleo+dairy hybrid. It's essentially extreme carb restriction, zero processed carbohydrates, zero processed sugars, zero seed oils. But where I'm not sticking to keto and more skewing towards Paleo is: I'm not obsessively counting carbs and while I roughly steer away from extremely starchy fruits and vegetables, if I want an apple, im gonna eat an apple, if I go for a run I'm not going to worry about blowing my carb budget on a banana, etc.

It basically boils down to: only buy whole foods, no grains, few legumes, very little packaging or "pre-preparation" aside from dairy (ie, I have to cook every meal I eat)

The other thing is.. while the evidence is looking pretty good in favor of the modern interpretation of cholesterol, it isn't a kill shot yet and that makes me slightly uncomfortable. so I'm playing both sides of the fence by eating low carb/high fat/high protein but not going insane on the protein sources: I try to get a lot of fatty fishes, more chicken, etc. I still eat a decent amount of beef, but I'm not doing the 100% beef/butter/bacon/eggs thing you'll sometimes see from extreme keto folks. They might be right that it's a completely healthy diet, but I feel safer being a bit more conservative while the science continues to shake out.

Some people might feel fine eating a stick of butter a day, but I'm not quite THAT convinced of the modern LDL interpretation to take it so far.

I basically eat the same way, although I eat potatoes and cake on cheat days.

Anything interesting on potatoes, why do you avoid them?

I eat sweet potatoes occasionally. White potatoes - I dunno, I don't have a good position... Just a rough idea that anything that starchy might as well be bread or sugar and I've already decided to avoid those. It might be one of those things I do where I have a rule just for the sake of keeping the rule in order to build discipline.

I'm profoundly undisciplined at times in other areas of life, so I figure if I can adhere to a few arbitrary rules here and there maybe it'll help in general. Perhaps I'm just nuts!

Couldn't have said this any better. There is wisdom in moderation. Can't go wrong staying away from processed foods.

I'm definitely no expert, but we are still animals. Chimps aren't eating hot pockets in the wild...

Also worth noting the role mitochondria play in converting that fuel into energy. Poor mitochondria health, LDL not getting used and you feel sluggish with no energy.

Best things for mitochondria, exercise and the antioxidant coq10.

Statins deplete your coq10 levels making your real health worse.

Great post. Thanks for the easy read 😊