A New LDL-Cholesterol Theory Coming to a Doctor Near You

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  • Опубліковано 24 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 567

  • @aleksandrazimpel8097
    @aleksandrazimpel8097 Місяць тому +82

    15 years ago my older brother had heart attack in the hospital while he went there with his wife-doctor specialist in diabetes. My brother was experiencing pain in his chest and trouble breathing so she decided to visit hospital with him. After they left the ER department where they declared him healthy and sent him for an X ray for pain in his shoulder he collapsed on the stairs and almost died. Defibrillator didn’t resuscitated him at all, one of doctors hit him in the chest with his fist and this brought my poor bro back to life. His cholesterol and LDL was normal. Now after years on statins and filled with stents his cholesterol is extremely low, his life miserable and he and her, the wife believe statins saved his life. Hard to not to agree with them 😂. I’m carnivore for 6 years my cholesterol is high, always was (stoped going to doctors after you know what so don’t know my current 🎉numbers) I never took statins in my life although I was pushed by my doctor since I was 60! And I love my fatty T-bone steaks! My younger brother 70, has 8 stents and he’s plant eating because red meat is the way to graveyard 😂 he’s also on statins. My third brother 72, drinks heavily all his life but since few years he is eating more meat and he’s more or less ok. He took 3 shots though and now he started to age rapidly. He never had heart problem and now is on statins, brainwashig working! All of my other brothers fully vaxxed and supporters of current things. I’m 73 healthy and strong with good muscles

    • @philipd8868
      @philipd8868 Місяць тому +1

      Well done

    • @AndrewsPickleballChannel-sc2iv
      @AndrewsPickleballChannel-sc2iv Місяць тому +1

      Only once there is acute injury does the LDL (Apo B) seem to show more causality is what I'm hearing from the video. So, once you have a heart attack you might be stuck on statins until your LDLs come way down. But if you are metabolically healthy, no heart injuries, and high LDL then the LDL is a signal of your high fat diet that you are burning fat as fuel source which is a positive marker.

  • @willemvanriet7160
    @willemvanriet7160 Місяць тому +33

    Dr Berg started using a very apt analogy. They keep blaming the fire men for fires because they are always present at a fire.

  • @jeffreyorlikowski6512
    @jeffreyorlikowski6512 Місяць тому +162

    I have always believed that cholesterol was a balm to soothe inflammation. Inflammation is caused by sugars,omega 6 fats, trans fats, and other highly processed foods,stress, and poor living habits. Your vid is right on. Thanks.

    • @dan11D179
      @dan11D179 Місяць тому +1

      Well your belief is wrong. Elevated LDL is itself inflammatory, it in itself does the damage to the arterial wall. Mutzel here is a complete idiot, and that's being polite.

    • @gatesroyale
      @gatesroyale Місяць тому +9

      Like literally when I was at my healthiest working out tones they did testing, and my cholesterol is very high, but that was just because I was using more fats for fuel

    • @nickma71
      @nickma71 Місяць тому

      Experts not taking bribes already said what cholesterol is. Your body makes it to build and repair cells.Including your brain. LDL is low density so it can pass through cell walls. Cholesterol in the skin makes Vitamin D when exposed to sunlight. It makes testosterone in men.

    • @ArcoZakus
      @ArcoZakus Місяць тому +7

      @@gatesroyale,
      You are probably familiar with the ideas about the Lipid Energy Model (LEM) and Lean Mass Hyper Responders (LMHR) that Dave Feldman and Nicholas Norwitz, PhD have been investigating, but if not then you might be interested in their videos here on youtube.

    • @gatesroyale
      @gatesroyale Місяць тому +2

      @@ArcoZakus yes actually I first heard of it about a week ago on this doctors carnivore UA-cam channel. Can you send me the link that goes further into detail?

  • @JMK-vo8pv
    @JMK-vo8pv Місяць тому +50

    Mike, you say that we should show our doctors this research about LDL not CAUSING atherosclerosis. That's exactly what I did with my long time cardiologist. What did he do when I handed him several articles on this topic? He belittled me and then he terminated me from his practice. And there lies the PROBLEM!!!

    • @angieobes9835
      @angieobes9835 Місяць тому +22

      Your doc did you a favor....revealed his true self

    • @3-DtimeCosmology
      @3-DtimeCosmology Місяць тому +10

      He somehow felt threatened by the information!

    • @mikeregan9531
      @mikeregan9531 Місяць тому +9

      Yes they are scared witless of confronting the industry.

  • @Unkn0wnGuy
    @Unkn0wnGuy Місяць тому +96

    I'm reading a book called The Clot Thickens, and he describes the cause of Plaque isn't from LDL but from damage to the artery wall. When the wall is damaged, a clot is formed, and then the wall grows over the clot. LDL is not the cause, but particles of LDL can be found in the area but not the cause. Anyone else read it? I'm not done but it's fascinating. Not sure if it's true or not?

    • @eddkennedy6458
      @eddkennedy6458 Місяць тому +21

      Yes Dr Malcolm kendrick wrote this book an expert in this field.

    • @dan11D179
      @dan11D179 Місяць тому

      @@eddkennedy6458 Malcolm Kendrick isn't a lipidologist, he's not an expert, he's just a family doctor, and a moron. There is no lab experiment where elevated LDL didn't single handedly replicate the disease.

    • @jerome4276
      @jerome4276 Місяць тому +14

      Highly recommended book. The Clot Thickens ties up all the loose ends.

    • @PaulBengtsson
      @PaulBengtsson Місяць тому +14

      Im 69, my LDL have always been on the high end and is now skyrocketing because I eat "to much fatty meat". Well, I checked everything and have no plack anywhere. But Im healthy, never smoked, stoped drink 15 years ago, but I had slightly high blood pressure. Now down. Slim and look fit. :-)
      I might be a hyper responder.

    • @No-Humans-Allowed
      @No-Humans-Allowed Місяць тому +23

      Malcolm Kendrick is one of the most respected thought leaders in this arena. What he teaches should be made compulsory for all doctors. But then I forget that 93% of doctors are pharma reps ☹️☹️

  • @michaelcrain3360
    @michaelcrain3360 Місяць тому +24

    Interesting term “trapped LDL”. LDL, in the atherosclerotic process, is a repair mechanism. It’s supposed to be there in an attempt to repair the endothelial damage, which occurs in specific, more turbulent, areas of the arteries. As a result of doing what LDL is supposed to be doing, “repair”, it ends up being part of plaque formation; surprisingly, comprising only 1/10 of 1% of the total plaque. The only reason LDL continues to get any attention is because of the continued messaging that it is causal. Atherosclerosis is due to chronically elevated blood pressure, primarily caused by, but not limited to, inflammation due to a poor diet. Thank you for spreading the word on this.

    • @FactsCountdown
      @FactsCountdown Місяць тому +2

      Can you please explain in detail what causes damage to arteries

    • @bobann3566
      @bobann3566 Місяць тому +1

      @@FactsCountdown The video did a great job of explaining that, were you not paying attention? He repeated it numerous times, I mean, many, many, many many many times.

    • @michaelcrain3360
      @michaelcrain3360 Місяць тому

      @@FactsCountdown The best explanation I’ve seen on UA-cam is by Dr. Abs, Drug Companies Lies: Cholesterol = Heart Disease .

  • @UnknownUser-sc6jx
    @UnknownUser-sc6jx Місяць тому +140

    70% of people who have a heart attack have normal or low cholesterol. The study shows these people had low cholesterol at least a year before their heart attack, it's not cholesterol but diabetes, blood clotting issues and smoking.

    • @thelaststylebender1678
      @thelaststylebender1678 Місяць тому +12

      You missed hypertension.

    • @UnknownUser-sc6jx
      @UnknownUser-sc6jx Місяць тому +20

      ​@@thelaststylebender1678hypertension is normally due to insulin resistance " diabetes" or high homocysteine. But you're correct thank you.

    • @jackoverton8343
      @jackoverton8343 Місяць тому +10

      Minority of people are also causing damage from overtraining.

    • @dustinirwin1
      @dustinirwin1 Місяць тому +3

      But what was their cholesterol for the decades before? It’s about the area under the curve, not a point in time. Many people adopt a healthy diet once they’ve already done substantial harm.

    • @genegayda3042
      @genegayda3042 Місяць тому

      I've come across the oxidated linoleic acid theory of heart disease on UA-cam from the channel Low Carb Down Under. Basically, linoleic acid from seed oils build up in the body because the body cannot use this omega-6 fatty acid for energy. So this builds up over years and oxidizes and damages the cholesterol that it is a part of and explains why LDL gets trapped in plaque.

  • @wlo93
    @wlo93 Місяць тому +64

    LDL is a transport mechanism of cholesterol and serves a useful purpose. It's the damaged LDL due to factors like diabetes and other oxidative stresses, and especially combined with hypertension, diabetes, and smoking that promotes plaque formation from damaged LDL. It's kind of like trying to mitigate fatalities from car accidents by getting rid of all the cars rather than reduce causes like drunk driving. They're not focusing on the causes.... the vid is spot on.

    • @nickma71
      @nickma71 Місяць тому

      Correct sir! I was absolved of the bullshit in 2012 on cholesterol. It is low density so it can pass through cell walls and carry nutrition.

    • @tspicks4360
      @tspicks4360 Місяць тому +3

      I developed arterial plaque sufficient to cause a 90% blockage, leading to a heart attack, 11 years ago. Was not diabetic in any way, not a smoker, not actively hypertensive ... in other words, those things are not prerequisites for developing. plaque. I did, btw, reverse my cvd, by any measure, through eating a diet of whole plant foods. This guy can be kinda clueless.

    • @beenflying1
      @beenflying1 Місяць тому

      @@tspicks4360 I had a 99% blockage, however no heart attack, luckily. I required a quintuple bypass. I have used a keto diet and fasting to dramatically improve my health and my high blood pressure. I lost 33Kgs and feel fantastic...

    • @ronkoloz7136
      @ronkoloz7136 Місяць тому +2

      _'Damaged LDL cholesterol'_ - what are you talking about???😅

    • @genegayda3042
      @genegayda3042 Місяць тому +7

      @@tspicks4360 Check out the oxidated linoleic acid theory of heart disease.

  • @jan117
    @jan117 Місяць тому +6

    In my humble opinion HDL and LDL are not cholesterol.
    It’s better to talk about High and low density lipoprotein.
    The HDL and LDL are just transporters from the cholesterol. The HDL deliver the cholesterol in all the places in our body where it’s needed. And the LDL brings it back to the liver.
    Thanks for the video from Thailand.

  • @livelearnandteach7402
    @livelearnandteach7402 Місяць тому +25

    Vessel wall damage is the root cause but they will always focus on the thing they can create a drug for.

    • @vickyburton2434
      @vickyburton2434 Місяць тому +1

      And therein lies the rub. Follow the money! Eating correctly never makes big pharma money!

  • @holistic-hannah
    @holistic-hannah Місяць тому +87

    I’m a doctor working in internal medicine & I’ve made a video discussing dietary fat and cholesterol!!
    Don’t know when doctors will start using their brain.
    They will NEVER let go of LDL-cholesterol because drug companies just want to create more and more drugs.

    • @richardtibbetts574
      @richardtibbetts574 Місяць тому +2

      Gotta make those payments on their BMW’s.

    • @jeffj318
      @jeffj318 Місяць тому

      What do you say about Dr Thomas Dayspring?

    • @holistic-hannah
      @holistic-hannah Місяць тому

      @@jeffj318 I’m not convinced. Personally I have seen people reverse atherosclerosis with a ketogenic diet. I have seen people reverse autoimmune conditions, schizophrenia & depression, and even dementia with keto/paleo!!
      a whole food plant based diet is definitely MUCH healthier than a SAD, but I’m not convinced that a vegan diet that lacks bioavailable proteins, omega3, vitamins and minerals & is rich in anti-nutrients if not carefully planned is evolutionarily appropriate for humans.

    • @holistic-hannah
      @holistic-hannah Місяць тому

      @@jeffj318 A quick look through his page he claims ketogenic diets increase apoB which means they increase risk of heart disease.
      Thing is that apoB tells us the sum total of apoB containing particles that include VLDL, IDL & LDL.
      In case of insulin resistance, this would be high because the VLDL number would be high, and so would the NUMBER of small LDL (atherogenic type). It makes sense that then, apoB is high in these phenotypes.
      Now, in case of ketogenic/low carb diets, LDL-C goes up, but the number of LDL particles may go down, and VLDL definitely goes down. Even if LDL particles are high, they are the large fluffy LDL particles which are not atherogenic, and do not get damaged.
      So most studies on apoB that show a higher risk would most likely be showing us an insulin resistant lipid profile rather than a metabolically healthy lipid profile. Since most people who have heart attacks have insulin resistance, they will most certainly have a lipid profile that has high apoB.
      I am not sure if we can extrapolate these most common studies to a metabolically healthy phenotype. We definitely need more studies on metabolically healthy people with high HDL-c, low TG, low VLDL, high LDL-c, and maybe even high apo B and do advanced testing such as CCTA/CAC on them to see what their cardiovascular risk may be. But for now, we don't have sufficient evidence. But, my opinion is that just looking at apo B in the context of an otherwise healthy lipid profile JUST because of high number of fluffy LDLs is not prudent.
      Hope this makes sense!

    • @marlenegold280
      @marlenegold280 Місяць тому +1

      … to make more billions

  • @JMK-vo8pv
    @JMK-vo8pv Місяць тому +17

    Hey Mike, have you read Dr. Malcolm Kendrick's book, "The Clot Thickens"? In his book, Dr. Kendrick opines that if a person's coronary glycocalyx and coronary endothelium is healthy and intact, there ain't NO WAY that atherosclerosis can even start, whether your LDL-C is 20mg/dL or 250mg/dL. To your point, it is high glucose, high insulin, smoking, hypertension etc. that actually damages the glycocalyx/endothelium and initiates the atherosclerosis process. As Malcolm Kendrick says, there is ZERO evidence, in ANY medical literature, that proves that LDL, or ANY liporprotein, including small dense LDL's and VLDL's, can damage/disrupt the coronary lining! As lipid researcher, Dr. David Diamond, points out, there are many people with familial hypercholesterolemia, who have LIFELONG high LDL-C, and they do not develop premature atherosclerosis.

    • @mkkrupp2462
      @mkkrupp2462 Місяць тому

      What about this APO B lipoprotein that many are now blaming for the damage ?

    • @JMK-vo8pv
      @JMK-vo8pv Місяць тому

      @@mkkrupp2462 Great question. Since most of our ApoB level is composed of the LDL particles, the ApoB blood level is about as useful for predicting atherosclerosis as LDL-C*****WORTHLESS. As Dr. Malcolm Kendrick says, "LDL-C, LDL-P, ApoB, small dense LDL's are all essentially a distraction which leads us away from the real cause of coronary artery damage----high blood glucose, high blood insulin and INSULIN RESISTANCE.

  • @c730360
    @c730360 Місяць тому +7

    I have had high cholesterol since my first blood test at 30, I am 60 and have never taken statins. My blood pressure was always 130/77 and the doctor always told me I was fine. Now that I am a carnivore and fast for approximately 16 hours on average, my blood pressure is 110/65. I have always done a lot of sports, even at 60 I continue to play soccer competitively. My VO2 MAX is 47.

  • @EvilMonkey7818
    @EvilMonkey7818 Місяць тому +5

    Thanks Mike. With papers like this maybe finally my parents to listen to me, about how cholesterol itself isn't the underlying problem with cardiovascular disease. It's nice to see studies like these catching up to what many of us knew years ago. Maybe in another 10 years the mainstream will recognize how blood sugar is more of an issue with blood pressure than having salty food.

  • @CarnivoreBryan
    @CarnivoreBryan Місяць тому +13

    Any “study” you find that says “May cause” you probably need to replace it with “May Not”.

  • @CriticalLinker
    @CriticalLinker Місяць тому +20

    One of the underlying causes that seems to get little mention nowadays is chronic stress. High cortisol levels cause hypertension, and there is some interesting research indicating that cortisol may also damage the endothelium of coronary arteries.

    • @gatesroyale
      @gatesroyale Місяць тому

      Interesting link and anything else?

    • @cornstar1253
      @cornstar1253 Місяць тому

      Cortisol is corrosive to arteries

    • @jackoverton8343
      @jackoverton8343 Місяць тому +5

      ​@@gatesroyale overtraining is another, obviously most fall on opposite side though. Some individuals get on a treadmill for hours keeping their heartrate way too high. Do that multiple times a week and you have damage that can't repair fast enough.

    • @gatesroyale
      @gatesroyale Місяць тому

      @@jackoverton8343 thanks for sharing this. I actually witnessed this personally.. you can basically I believe overuse your adrenaline glands and be such a high of Cortizone for so long within a months time you lose all energy. I think the best protocol is you can still keep that high schedule, but two days in between with rest..

    • @alanj9978
      @alanj9978 Місяць тому +4

      Casey Means talks about this. Stress, lack of sleep, and lack of exercise are as big a problem as bad diet.

  • @gerard6629
    @gerard6629 Місяць тому +19

    A step in the right direction. But, when is a study going to be published on how the body repairs the damage caused by smoking,diabetes or high blood pressure?

    • @gatesroyale
      @gatesroyale Місяць тому +7

      Water fasting sauna collagen peptides, good sleep, grounding and days with stannous exercise endurance plus days of deep deep rest more then 8 hours all help. Controlling your pH as well. Could it be beneficial like having lemon and water.

  • @yuvallevi5161
    @yuvallevi5161 Місяць тому +6

    You're a good lad Mike!
    You genuinely care.
    I can hear it in your voice
    "Stop smoking! What are you doing??"

  • @privateerburrows
    @privateerburrows Місяць тому +8

    Okay, if blood pressure is what causes atherosclerosis, then we should stop using mouth-wash. The most common cause of blood pressure is inability to produce NO2. And the most common cause of reduced production of NO2 is excessive fluoride consumption. If you already avoid using mouth-wash, and yet have a blood pressure problem, the second most common cause of insufficient NO2 production is arginine deficiency. Either supplement with arginine or citroulline, which we can convert to arginine; or eat a cupfull of watermelon every day.
    Another thing: If you are past 40 or 45 and you have arterial damage, your body cannot repair the damage due to minimal production of collagen. Taking collagen supplements will not help, because ingested collagen gets digested down to amino-acids and small peptides; so to re-constitute those nutrients back into collagen you need a ton of vitamin C, plus the amino-acid lysine.
    The only way to restore production of collagen after 50 is to follow the Pauli protocol, which is basically 6 grams of vitamin C and 3 grams of lysine per day. That is the MINIMUM; personally I take
    10 to 12 grams a day of vitamin C per day. Before you think of the word "mega-dose", consider that humans and orangutans are the only animals that are not capable of producing their own vitamin C. Your dog produces about 17 grams of vitamin C per day. A cow produces more than 100 grams of vitamin C per day. And you might ask why don't we produce it too? We lost the ability. We still have the gene for vitamin C production, but the gene is not getting activated; nobody knows why. Anyways, back in prehistory we did not need to consume vitamin C as citrus fruits or as supplements, simply because we hunted animals for food, and ate them raw. Raw meat has enormous amounts of vitamin C. Cooking, however, destroys it. And no, I am not advocating eating raw meat; that's dangerous nowadays. I'm just saying all that because people have such naive perspectives on nutrition you have to write a whole paragraph to explain each word you write. 99% of people are completely incapable of taking in eve a small piece of info, like the importance of the Pauli protocol to reactivate collagen synthesis. 99% of people just don't click.
    Another thing is the gradual clotting of blood as we age, which increases viscosity. There is one simple solution to that: Japanese natto. Consume it, and your blood will quickly go back to the fluidity of a 20 year old's blood. Just eat one square package of natto every other day; the enzyme nattokinase present in it, dissolves blood clots. Natto smells and tastes awful to our western taste, but so, what I do is I fry the natto together with onion, garlic and ginger, and after 15 minutes of frying I throw in a couple of eggs, and make it an omelette or scramble.

    • @jrket8141
      @jrket8141 Місяць тому +1

      Won't the heat from frying natto destroy the active enzymes?

    • @privateerburrows
      @privateerburrows Місяць тому +3

      @@jrket8141 No, it doesn't. I never eat natto in any other form than fried, and I notice the difference natto makes in my system whenever I hurt myself and bleed. Same day after eating natto, a wound takes 2 or 3 times as long to stop bleeding. This is precisely because nattokinase in the blood is dissolving the blood clot even as it is trying to form. I once ate natto twice in one day, then hurt my finger, and I was wiping blood with servillettes for the next hour and a half. So be careful. But to answer your question, nattokinase is definitely NOT denatured by the heat of frying. And in fact, cooking doesn't destroy as many things as most people assume. Vitamin C is definitely destroyed by cooking; that is a famous case. And some B vitamins. But most vitamins are detanured by heat, but very slowly; so you might lose a few per-cent potency over a 30 minute boil. You have to check one supplement at a time what cooking or heating will do; there is no blanket rule that can be applied.

    • @jrket8141
      @jrket8141 Місяць тому +1

      @@privateerburrows Thanks

  • @nbrown5907
    @nbrown5907 Місяць тому +19

    Well they need to go deeper because you know damn well there are folks living to a ripe old age with a high LDL, Low LDL is dangerous too! Maybe some folks are affected but certainly not all. Yes type 2 diabetes and obesity are risk factors for so many problems!

    • @alanj9978
      @alanj9978 Місяць тому +1

      It's not so much that they're risk factors, they're just the most obvious symptoms of the same metabolic dysfunction that is causing heart disease and many cancers.

  • @nelsontang1055
    @nelsontang1055 Місяць тому +12

    Mike, so well said, thanks for emphasis of the "other factors" ie. what insults the inside of walls of blood vessels,HTN smoking/vaping, high blood sugar damage iron overload....excellent work Mike.thanks

  • @bobann3566
    @bobann3566 Місяць тому +7

    Do you blame the firemen for the fire? Cholesterol is a fireman at a fire. HELLO What is causing the fire? Processed Veggie/Seed Oils, sugar, processed foods.

  • @stanleymcintyre8100
    @stanleymcintyre8100 Місяць тому +8

    LDL is a big red hairing, it has nothing to do with heart problems. Stress has a huge effect on the heart. Excessive sugar in the blood causes inflammation of all arteries, huge sugar spikes regularly are with their effects. All plaque formation when broken down have fibrin in them from blood clotting. LDL cholesterol is a lipid transport system. Stress, inflammation from high sugar diet, poor metabolic health, causes damage to the epithelial walls of the arteries which can rupture and clotting of blood occurs then plague formation occurs, fresh formation that have not had time to mature can rupture again or several times causing bigger blood clot which can brake off go to the brain causing a stroke, or they can go to the arteries of the heart causing a heart attack. These one are apparent immediately but this happens to all your arteries, other parts of the body can have claudication caused by inflammation due to poor metabolic health and too much sugar.

  • @elementalAlma
    @elementalAlma Місяць тому +19

    Finally doctors are doctoring… shocking this was not correlated until now

    • @mikeregan9531
      @mikeregan9531 Місяць тому

      My cardiology professor has put me on an LDL reducing drug called Repatha it does work where nothing else has and is also reported to reduce existing atherosclerotic blockages. Once I believe its done that I will stop taking it.

  • @timothydavis2568
    @timothydavis2568 Місяць тому +3

    I think the live videos are really authentic, a nice change from the typical highly edited youtube video

  • @slwiser1
    @slwiser1 Місяць тому +7

    It appears settled science is changing again.

  • @Shishlik81
    @Shishlik81 Місяць тому +13

    This reads like a paper funded by people who wanna sell Statins

    • @BeefNEggs057
      @BeefNEggs057 Місяць тому

      And the new injectable drugs that get your ldl down to 35. That’s safe. No risks at all. Totally safe and effective.

  • @willemvanriet7160
    @willemvanriet7160 Місяць тому +5

    I love every single one of my LDLs! As long as my trigs are low I have no fear. And they are at 43 after 18m on a keto diet with 18:4 IF.

    • @uplandtube
      @uplandtube Місяць тому

      You lost two hours 😂, 18:4…

  • @steveanderson4005
    @steveanderson4005 Місяць тому +10

    people should read ' The Clot Thickens'. Dr Malcolm Kendrick

  • @charlesoneill466
    @charlesoneill466 Місяць тому +3

    ❤great video. Loud and clear, Baton Rouge. Listening to replay. Evangelize the culture.

  • @doejohn8674
    @doejohn8674 Місяць тому +5

    Association is not causation!
    Watching replay from Switzerland, thanks for all your videos!

  • @davidherr6793
    @davidherr6793 Місяць тому +7

    Malcolm Kendrick has been saying this for years.

  • @epluribusunum6403
    @epluribusunum6403 Місяць тому +2

    Watching from the Los Angeles area. I really enjoy your content and information. Thank you for the work you do.

  • @richardbray8004
    @richardbray8004 Місяць тому +52

    I have heard enough about blaming the firemen.

    • @GerbenWulff
      @GerbenWulff Місяць тому +5

      Well, the results of this study do suggest that the firemen are actually setting the fire in this case. High blood pressure and diabetes increase risk even at lower LDL levels. People with high risk do not get a higher LDL level as a result of high blood pressure or diabetes (in which case the relation between risk and LDL levels would be similar for people with diabetes and high blood pressure compared to the general population).

    • @beenflying1
      @beenflying1 Місяць тому +9

      @@GerbenWulff Fatty liver causes the small dense LDL.People with high good LDL live longer.

    • @michaelkrull3331
      @michaelkrull3331 Місяць тому +7

      Perhaps a better analogy would be to imagine damage is done to a road. Workmen show up to repair it. As a consequence traffic is congested. But before the damaged road can be fixed, more damage occurs, causing further traffic congestion. And the process continues until traffic is halted altogether.

    • @ArcoZakus
      @ArcoZakus Місяць тому

      @@michaelkrull3331 ,
      ... and the damage to the road never gets repaired.

    • @bobann3566
      @bobann3566 Місяць тому +1

      @@GerbenWulff No The firemen are not setting the fire. sugar, veggie oil/seed oils oxydative stress due to natural aging process, these are setting the fire.

  • @quisge
    @quisge Місяць тому +3

    Professor Bart Kay has been ranting about high blood pressure and turbulence as the root cause of ASCVD for a while now. Additionally, this paper advising reducing LDL "as low as possible" is utterly absurd.

  • @oliv23_
    @oliv23_ Місяць тому +4

    The length to which you go to find that one argument that goes your way in a paper literally saying that the magnitude and duration of exposure of LDL has a direct impact on progression of atherosclerosis is pretty amazing.

    • @andrewguy8599
      @andrewguy8599 Місяць тому +4

      The paper does suggest that there's a lot of benefit to be had by lowering LDL cholesterol levels e.g. with statins which does kind of conflict with a lot of advice saying LDL isn't 'bad' and you don't need to reduce it. I'm completely confused to be honest, my Dr is adamant I should be on statins but I've been avoiding taking them but I'm beginning to question the wisdom of doing that...

  • @nobukazumikami5466
    @nobukazumikami5466 Місяць тому +8

    This research is not differentiating Type A and Type B LDL-C. Type A LDL-C is highly dependent of dietary fat consumption while Type B LDL-C is dependent of high blood glucose level. And the one which causes atherosclerosis is Type B LDL-C which statins cannot lower.

    • @cajampa
      @cajampa Місяць тому +3

      Agreed. It is weird they did not account for that or even talk about it on the paper, if they have such a good handle of the topic.

    • @andreahatfield1456
      @andreahatfield1456 Місяць тому

      Yes, it's true! I just fact checked this info on pubmed.
      I wish my doctor would do a little research on this. She is trying to push the statins on me!

    • @andreahatfield1456
      @andreahatfield1456 Місяць тому

      Yes, it's true! I just fact checked this info on pubmed.
      I wish my doctor would do a little research on this. She is trying to push the statins on me!

    • @andreahatfield1456
      @andreahatfield1456 Місяць тому

      Also, my oncologist told me about this type a and type b LDL C.
      She seems to know more about cholesterol than my GP.
      I AM CANCER FREE after 18 months keto/carnivore , NO CHEMO!!

    • @cajampa
      @cajampa Місяць тому

      @@andreahatfield1456 If it is type B that is caused by high good glucose levels that is the bad one. Try berberine, chromium/vanadium and TUDCA. I give this to my parents to keep their insulin sensitivity up.

  • @Metqa
    @Metqa Місяць тому +3

    I've been saying for years, ever since before I started University that cholesterol is more like a patch material and not some evil substance out to destroy your body. and taking away LDL is like removing all the wall patching material in your house without addressing the hyperactive children playing contact sports in the house and punching holes in the walls in the first place. If you have no holes, you don't need patch kits, but if you have to patch the walls regularly, getting rid of the spackle won't solve the damage problem.
    Being a young person, I didn't have studies to back me us so I wrote stories with characters representing the different cells and substances and got made fun of because of it. I figured people are too stupid to read a study so maybe a story would help them understand, but they were so indoctrinated to the Lipid Hypothesis, they couldn't suspend that belief long enough to think critically about it. Now decades later, studies are finally showing I had the right idea, but what good does it do when people are still afraid of eggs and downing statins like candy?
    Since the carrier is just going out and coming back, that'd be like saying we need More Empty Busses going out to transport people, but we need to LIMIT the busses carrying people to their destination because they get sometimes get stuck in traffic. It's the Same Bus!

  • @enila1212
    @enila1212 Місяць тому +8

    Dr malcolm kendrick wrote about this in his book the clot thickens long ago

  • @tremfilsccsolutions8902
    @tremfilsccsolutions8902 Місяць тому +6

    I am a regular viewer of your videos.
    I want to share my experience with you.
    From 2021 to 2022 I used to do regular intermittent fasting and prolonged fasting. While doing prolonged fasting then I used to get into ketosis and I knew this from the smell of my urine.
    After almost a year I did a 3 day water fast and I wore a CGM my sugar was continuously above 130mg/dl. Sometimes it went to 160 also.
    I don't think I was in ketosis because there was no change in urine smell.
    Also I was absolutely fine unlike the earlier fastings when I had a lot of discomfort.
    I feel fresh with much greater mental clarity and energy to do physical activities.
    Was my body creating glucose through gluconeohenesis ?
    I think you should do research on type 2 diabetes patients to see how fasting works for them.
    Pls do reply at your earliest convenience.
    Best Wishes
    Colonel Madhusudhan Nair . Retired
    India

  • @palosamo
    @palosamo Місяць тому +1

    LDL is the vehicle delivering cholesterol which is the raw material used to repair damaged endothelium. Blaming LDL for atherosclerosis is like blaming fire engines for starting a fire.

  • @FloridaFanz
    @FloridaFanz 10 годин тому +1

    Wow, You are exactly correct!!! 🎯

  • @jimmorrison2124
    @jimmorrison2124 29 днів тому +1

    Had a heart attack at 57. NEVER had a LDL over 130. What I DID have was high triglycerides, high BP, low HDL, high fasting insulin.
    But, the MDs persist that it was my LDL ALONE that caused my cardiac problems. Makes ZERO sense.

  • @kerrylamb9808
    @kerrylamb9808 Місяць тому +3

    Hello from South Africa 😊
    Thanks for the informative talk!

  • @raystpierre3680
    @raystpierre3680 Місяць тому +5

    Why does low density cholesterol exist, what is its purpose? I believe the our bodies don’t process high refined oils and fat substitutes that leads to fatty liver and more damage to body cells that need cholesterol to repair nerves and joints.

  • @soozin2u
    @soozin2u 23 дні тому +1

    This is not a new theory, but it’s good to see increasing
    evidence for it.

  • @agfairfield8575
    @agfairfield8575 Місяць тому +4

    4:38 Anyone who has read Kendrick’s The Clot Thickens already knew this.

  • @sylviacandler5541
    @sylviacandler5541 24 дні тому

    Southern Girl here. Great video! Thank You!

  • @swamphawk6227
    @swamphawk6227 Місяць тому +14

    UA-cam used to be more reliable giving me notifications for your streams.

    • @tamashumi7961
      @tamashumi7961 Місяць тому

      Reducing range for anything which doesn't fully support the establishment narrative is yet another form of censorship. As is likely that my comment may not be visible to anyone but me or get deleted automatically straight away after I post it.

    • @carynsommersdorf2453
      @carynsommersdorf2453 Місяць тому +2

      Sometimes you have to unfollow to follow again to get notifications. YT does that to me too.

  • @luckssj
    @luckssj Місяць тому +17

    This is why I take Magnesium Glycinate and Liposomal Vitamin C and this is keeping my vessel walls are being healed. I am from Colorado

    • @GregariousAntithesis
      @GregariousAntithesis Місяць тому +1

      I drink sodium hyperchlorite to keep my arteries clean 😂

    • @gatesroyale
      @gatesroyale Місяць тому +3

      Collagen peptides, fish oil and a hot sauna help as well.

    • @GAB-kw7uk
      @GAB-kw7uk Місяць тому +1

      ​@GregariousAnrhat that's bleach, surely you jest😮

    • @GregariousAntithesis
      @GregariousAntithesis Місяць тому +2

      @@GAB-kw7uk i joust

    • @GregariousAntithesis
      @GregariousAntithesis Місяць тому +12

      @@GAB-kw7uk the irony is i can make such a insane remark and it doesnt get deleted by youtube yet talk about minerals and diet and it gets deleted.

  • @comptytom
    @comptytom Місяць тому +1

    Blood pressure is a major factor and salt is involved there: The salt contribution seems to be a product of low dietary potassium. That stiffens the arterial wall assisting calcification that attracts LDL as a healing agent. Or so the story goes, so far.

  • @mkkrupp2462
    @mkkrupp2462 Місяць тому +2

    Watching from Tasmania Australia

  • @steinervision7643
    @steinervision7643 Місяць тому +3

    I need some Pop Tarts after watching Unfrosted!!

  • @mikeward9870
    @mikeward9870 Місяць тому +37

    I think Dave Feldman's camp has postulated/found that (healthy) LDL is part of the body's repair process for the insults.

    • @bobann3566
      @bobann3566 Місяць тому +1

      There is no unhealthy LDL, fyi.

    • @PeterDuval
      @PeterDuval Місяць тому

      @@bobann3566 Actually, there is. LDL cholesterol that has been damaged by glycation is bad. (Glycation is the covalent attachment of a sugar to a protein, lipid or nucleic acid molecule.) Glycation causes plaque build-up. When you don't eat low-carb, you will have a high % of damaged LDL. That is why (for the 95% of the population who does not eat low-carb) there is a statistically relevant relationship between plaque and LDL. The problem is that doctors believe that all LDL is bad.

    • @bobann3566
      @bobann3566 Місяць тому

      ​@@PeterDuval You are blaming the fire on the fireman because he got burned.

    • @mikeward9870
      @mikeward9870 Місяць тому

      @@bobann3566 Sure there is. Glycated LDL. LDL made with damaged proteins. This stuff can even be measured.

    • @bobann3566
      @bobann3566 Місяць тому

      @@mikeward9870 LDL does not come glycated, that happens to it through foolish choices when it comes to the one thing I have total control over, what I put in my mouth.

  • @gstlynx
    @gstlynx Місяць тому +14

    Ignores people with Familial Hypercholesterolemia, according to this they should all have ASCVD, yet they don't. Yeah they give a nod to vessel injury....

  • @RD-ss1ik
    @RD-ss1ik Місяць тому +3

    Watching from Baguio, Philippines. My LDL cholesterol is also high.

  • @Benilde-b5j
    @Benilde-b5j Місяць тому

    Thank you for your work from Vancouver BC

  • @gerard6629
    @gerard6629 Місяць тому +4

    I will be more specific. When will a study explain the mechanisms the body employs to repair damaged arteries from smoking, diabetes and high blood pressure?

  • @robbiej2749
    @robbiej2749 Місяць тому

    Listening/watching from Singapore. Always glad to see/hear your content 👍

  • @Sacrifice13
    @Sacrifice13 Місяць тому +5

    Man. Love the channel, long time follower here. Please don't change your tone, don't get annoyed. Please. When you talk like that in the end it even makes me anxious. Present please in the usual peaceful form.

  • @BrianPremo
    @BrianPremo Місяць тому +6

    My LDL is 244. (Normal blood pressure, non diabetic)

    • @rdiemidio65
      @rdiemidio65 Місяць тому +5

      My LDL is over 300. It's always been high. I eat a keto lifestyle. Alll other markers are great, no diabetes, hypertension low A1C high HDL low TRI. My dr said i'm gonna have a heart attack in a month if i dont go on a statin. Well its been months, I should call and let her know that I'm still here...lol

    • @JMK-vo8pv
      @JMK-vo8pv Місяць тому

      @@rdiemidio65 Another GREAT example of us patients starting to get SMARTER than our doctors!!!📖📈📉🔬🗃📚

  • @robertwilkinson1046
    @robertwilkinson1046 Місяць тому +1

    Listening from Peterborough, UK

  • @dionchavez0180
    @dionchavez0180 Місяць тому +7

    How about NATTOKINASE?

  • @mabelheinzle2275
    @mabelheinzle2275 Місяць тому +1

    From Liechtenstein 🇱🇮 thank you

  • @paulasusan63
    @paulasusan63 8 днів тому

    Watching from Stewartsville, Missouri

  • @GerbenWulff
    @GerbenWulff Місяць тому +13

    I thought that cholesterol was the bad thing that caused arterial plaques. Now I read that it's actually the LDL particles that transport cholesterol and other lipids around the body that get caught in the plaques. This means that cholesterol from animal fat is not the culprit, it's the LDL that the body makes as a response to eating fatty foods that's the culprit. That also means that although vegetable oils aren't absorbed as well, it still stimulates LDL production and thus plaque formation. The narrative from the plant-based community that plants do not contain cholesterol and as a result does not increase CVD risk appears to be wrong.
    Cholesterol and lipids are needed to make strong cell membranes, so I doubt that reducing LDL by completely eliminate fat intake is going to prevent arterial cells from getting damaged. Medications might reduce LDL exposure, but the plaques are not just there to make you sick: they cover damaged cells, so these can heal. I would love to know whether LDL lowering drugs are not leading to other problems, like aneurysms.
    We know that low LDL is also problematic, so the idea from this paper to basically 'vaccinate' people by giving them very low LDL sounds very dangerous. I think vaccinating by giving people lead or cyanide will work much better: they will not get ASCVD (but instead die from lead or cyanide poisoning). That doesn't mean we should do it.
    We know that people who have high LDL on carnivore, often have low or no plaques, AND we know that plaques are reversible when people switch to a healthier diet such as a carnivore diet. So, there may be an association for the general population that indicates that higher LDL leads to more plaques, but the most effective solution is not to lower LDL by eating less fat (although it might work if you eat a healthy whole-foods, low fat diet), but to eat a diet that reduces inflammation.

    • @dan11D179
      @dan11D179 Місяць тому

      You're wrong. Atherosclerosis is only experimentally replicated in lab by elevating LDL. Elevated LDL alone causes the arterial injury. People on carnivore diet have accelerated cardiovascular disease, consequently experiencing 2x more hospital admissions for heart attack than general populace. What you actually need is a hard reset on everything you think you know, because all you've believed up till now is lies.
      See: JACC: Advances
      Volume 3, Issue 6, June 2024, 100924 Association of a Low-Carbohydrate High-Fat Diet With Plasma Lipid Levels and Cardiovascular Risk

    • @gatesroyale
      @gatesroyale Місяць тому

      I haven’t seen one podcast making whole video about this topic which is probably the most interesting subject. I’ve been tuning into when I started working out 6 to 8 hours a day. Another very interesting topic. Maybe U can try but how to reduce uric-Acid levels as a high performance athlete.

    • @GerbenWulff
      @GerbenWulff Місяць тому

      @@gatesroyale I am not an athlete, but I get problems with Uric acid when I eat fructose (fruits or things that contain high fructose corn syrup). But I only became sensitive to fructose as a result of eating a diet very high in proteins (which break down into uric acid). So, there are different ways of dealing with this, but I think as a high-performance athlete, you do not want to go low protein, although perhaps you don't need to eat as much protein as I do.

    • @moiragoldsmith7052
      @moiragoldsmith7052 Місяць тому +1

      Fresh celery and coriander will help calm uric acid. But are you taking whey to get sufficient protein in? If so, take it alongside a slice of pineapple, core included. The bromelain concentrated with in the core will help with the digestion of whey protein.
      Lemon juice squeezed on top of any protein you eat is also a good way to deal with the digestion of protein....and a small amountof decent vinegar or pickled foods in the same gut load will also help digestion of protein and deter uric acid build up. ( Head not in a warm place; Iv'e spent 50 years working and studying natural nutrition and food science. I sincerely hope this helps you. Good luck. )

    • @genegayda3042
      @genegayda3042 Місяць тому +2

      @@gatesroyale Reduce uric acid production by getting rid of fructose and alcohol. That is the reason the body makes it.

  • @shirnakusakabe3541
    @shirnakusakabe3541 Місяць тому +1

    High ApoB particle count is causal to atherosclerosis. Nobody argues that all these other factors are of importance. If you have perfect metabolic health but sky-high ApoB, you are likely going to end up with atherosclerosis.

  • @polibm6510
    @polibm6510 Місяць тому +3

    Please, let know about this to Dr. Alo, Peter Rogers MD, Dr. Neil Barnard and other clowns!

  • @earthflute2248
    @earthflute2248 Місяць тому +2

    Omg. I am screaming here.
    LDL is the bandaid to the arterial damage caused by the insults inflicted.
    LDL is not the cause of heart attacks, etc.. it is the outcome of these insults. It is the marker screaming.. over here!
    Stop these insults, then there will be no to low LDL buildup. Lower CAC score.
    Reducing LDL without reducing the insults will lead to horrendous arterial damage and no repair mechanism. Statins do that. Not good.
    Duh.

  • @jaywhoisit4863
    @jaywhoisit4863 Місяць тому +2

    Is it possible the body is depositing cholesterol in area of damage in an attempt to repair or at least aid in repair. The body doesn’t have another mechanism to seal the vascular wound while repairs are carried out? So eventually a rupture of cholesterol plaque kills us but without the initial damage the cholesterol is irrelevant? Or is it a case of cholesterol getting stuck in a vascular wound as it’s flowing by in the blood stream?

  • @saapproved
    @saapproved Місяць тому +3

    Watching from Singapore. High LDL (5.1mmol/L) but low Triglycerides (0.63mmol/L), no sugar, kinda normal BP (125/82) and doctor quite insist to put me on statin…

  • @gener.1253
    @gener.1253 Місяць тому

    Blaming cholesterol for artery damage is the same as blaming the ambulance and police vehicles for the traffic accident. The damage is caused by the excess sugar in the blood.

  • @mballer
    @mballer Місяць тому +3

    Fire truck vs fire debate as always.

  • @bshul10
    @bshul10 Місяць тому +1

    Again like all the other youtubers "LDL isn't culprit", it's lifestyle changes/vessel injury, that are important.... bad message to the public... it's BOTH... improve your hypertension, smoking, diabetes, obesity and exercise.... but ALSO LOWER YOUR LDL with statins if necessary... Writing is on the wall.

  • @timothytrudgen8881
    @timothytrudgen8881 Місяць тому +2

    We have to look at what causes LDL move into artery wall. And what cause it to stay there. The early atheroscerotic process is reversable without inflammation and excess oxidised lipids which prevent macrophage from releasing the cholesterol from the plaque. Total LDL association is not causal at all. The small very dense subset of LDL may be more causative because this has many characteristic associated with mechanisms that maintain plaque development. These small dense LDL are not measured and the mostly contain oxidised lipids and stay in the blood for extended periods. They occur in a high Triglyceride environment. So it might just all go back to excess TG.

  • @LobsterMobility
    @LobsterMobility Місяць тому +1

    That is fascinating about things like insulin resistance and high blood pressure can lead to damage to the arterial wall leading to arteriosclerosis. I like how you are explaining research papers that I wouldnt be able to decipher on my own, And I really like how fit your looking brother, I like my Doctors to be displaying signs that they know how to at least keep themselves Fit haha! Andre

  • @lorenzonioi7855
    @lorenzonioi7855 Місяць тому

    I forgot how great is starting the day with a Metabolic Mike deep dive!
    Greetings from Rome

  • @JasonFuhrman
    @JasonFuhrman Місяць тому +3

    Maybe I'm missing something. I don't think anyone is saying NOT to lower blood pressure or fix metabolic health. They're just showing how those things exacerbate the formation of plaque over a lifetime of exposure. The non-smokers, and normal-blood pressure people still have an increase of plaque accumulation over time, it's just less than the people with bad habits.
    Not bashing as my LDL is pretty high from low carb/being lean. I'm just not sure how you think this is revolutionary.
    Now if the graph showed little to no increase over time of plaque accumulation in the "normal" population and a great increase in the "abnormal" population, this would be big news.

    • @dan11D179
      @dan11D179 Місяць тому

      What your're missing is that mikes reading ability is dog shit and he has a fake diploma.

    • @thelaststylebender1678
      @thelaststylebender1678 Місяць тому

      Nonsense. Cholesterol is normal healthy people isn’t causing anything. Is the insulin resistance, the metabolic syndrome. Why does cholesterol take so long to cause plaque to form. There are too many holes in this theory. It’s not the cholesterol in isolation. Read more.

    • @PaulBengtsson
      @PaulBengtsson Місяць тому +1

      Well, Im 69, always had LDL in the the higher rank. Now up to close 400 because of meat consumption. Im very healthy, slim. Checked my heart, my blood wessels around heart, in neck and so on. I also had an MRI on my brain. No plack anywhere. But, I never smoked. Moderate drinking. Dont drink anymore. Im on low carb diet.
      And had minimum of prosessed food in my life. Guess that helped too.

    • @JasonFuhrman
      @JasonFuhrman Місяць тому

      @@PaulBengtsson that's great! i'm hoping it's the same for me. The more I learn, the more it appears that cholesterol isn't a general thing. It's personal in a lot of ways in how your genetics respond to certain diets. It's why you can have two people with very different cholesterol on the same exact diet. Generalizing it isn't helpful. I'm not a population. I'm an individual.

  • @sgill4833
    @sgill4833 Місяць тому +1

    It doesn't help that almost all supplements contain stearic acid which causes endothelial dysfunction.

  • @microknife19
    @microknife19 Місяць тому

    I didn't see the Livestream, but I'm watching from Sydney, Australia.

  • @lesann1896
    @lesann1896 Місяць тому

    I’m in my late 50’s! Walk 3-5 miles a day - 5’2 and 120! I rarely eat carbs or sugar. I have high HDL and LDL cholesterol and all other healthy lipids etc -no heart problems in my family history. But they want to put me on statins. Nope! But it’s hard because life insurance companies unfairly base premiums on cholesterol!!

  • @vgweber1063
    @vgweber1063 4 дні тому

    Also, keep in mind that hypothyroidism, particularly the Hashimoto’s kind, will lead to high LDL if the thyroid treatment is not successful. My blood pressure is on the low side of normal, my Triglycerides are low, my HDL is around 80, but my LDL is sky high (270s). I got a Calcium Arterial scan just so I could prove to my doctor that I’m not on death’s door. My score is zero. He wanted me to consider taking a statin. I had to tell him no thank you. Trying to support my thyroid with supplements and good quality Omega 3s. I practice intermittent fasting daily.

  • @thomastsagklas
    @thomastsagklas Місяць тому +4

    After you download and read this paper I urge you to find and read a book named "The clot thickens".
    Then continue doing more research in the competing hypotheses (cholesterol vs. thrombogenic), and decide which one makes more sense to you.
    Oh, and please get your doctors to read that book as well.
    To your (our) heart health.

  • @zepho100
    @zepho100 Місяць тому +2

    Can you repair the initial insult over time? My concern is whether this is irreparable damage as someone who’s just started working out.

  • @rsdaarud
    @rsdaarud Місяць тому

    Great sound quality here in Loveland, CO

  • @philipd8868
    @philipd8868 Місяць тому

    Yudkin had evidence that cholesterol was linked to sugar, not cholesterol. Recent evidence indicated that sugar raised small LDL (I think it was) not all LDL. And the Framingham study indicated that a high cholesterol diet was protective. I would like to know if they differentiated the LDL.

  • @picmenose
    @picmenose Місяць тому

    Thank you from Toronto Ontario.

  • @mbrochh82
    @mbrochh82 Місяць тому

    Here's a ChatGPT summary:
    - The speaker introduces a new analysis on LDL cholesterol, focusing on cumulative exposure and its impact on atherosclerosis.
    - The study, published in Nature Reviews Cardiology, suggests that age-related increases in LDL cholesterol contribute to atherosclerosis and coronary artery disease.
    - The speaker emphasizes the importance of vessel wall damage in the formation of atherosclerotic plaque.
    - The study proposes that lifetime burden of LDL cholesterol is directly causative of increased atherosclerotic plaque, leading to heart issues and strokes.
    - The idea of developing drugs to create a vaccine-like effect to reduce LDL cholesterol levels is discussed.
    - The study highlights that high blood pressure, diabetes, smoking, and other conditions exacerbate vessel wall damage, contributing to plaque formation.
    - The speaker stresses the need to focus on preventing initial vessel wall insults, such as high blood pressure, poor metabolic health, smoking, and obesity.
    - The biological effect of LDL on atherosclerosis depends on both the magnitude and duration of LDL exposure.
    - The speaker encourages addressing factors like high blood pressure, insulin resistance, smoking, and sedentary activity to prevent vessel wall damage.
    - The study suggests that cumulative exposure to LDL generates a unique biomarker for estimating the risk of cardiovascular events.
    - The speaker emphasizes the importance of looking at the overall metabolic health, including triglycerides, insulin, glucose, and hemoglobin A1C levels.
    - The speaker promotes hydration and the use of electrolytes to support blood viscosity and overall health.
    - Main message: While LDL cholesterol is associated with atherosclerosis, it is crucial to address and prevent initial vessel wall insults such as high blood pressure, poor metabolic health, smoking, and obesity to effectively reduce cardiovascular risk.

  • @moiragoldsmith7052
    @moiragoldsmith7052 Місяць тому

    Just love your passion and knowledge Mike. Keep on m'dear. 🎉👍😁

  • @homomorphic
    @homomorphic Місяць тому +1

    I am an 18/6 IF keto-lacto-ovo-vegetarian. My BP is nominally 100/70. I am also LMHR and if I achieved ketosis through carb restriction alone I'd have nutty apob. Instead, my apob is 118 because I achieve ketosis via IF + *low* carb (about 50g/day). So I attenuate the LMHR triad via carbs but still get into ketosis via intermittent fasting.
    *All* of my labs (with the exception of LDL and apob) are *perfect *. My HDL is 57, and my trigs are 115 (ratio is 2.01). My hsCRP is 0.9.
    So my approach is to get great metabolic numbers and then to try and mitigate apob as much as possible (via carbs) without losing the great metabolic numbers.

    • @1timbarrett
      @1timbarrett Місяць тому +2

      Might we eventually learn that apoB is of doubtful value as a predictor of CVD? 🤔

    • @homomorphic
      @homomorphic Місяць тому +2

      @@1timbarrett the way I think of it is that apob is the bricks and inflammation is the bricklayer. Remove either one and no plaque wall is built. Given the myriad of problems associated with chronic inflammation though, if you can only remove one, remove inflammation. If you can remove both, then great, but if you can only remove one, make it inflammation.

    • @dan11D179
      @dan11D179 Місяць тому

      @@homomorphic Look you're not gaming biology. Keto dieters experience 2x more hospital admissions for heart attacks than general population, and the general population sucks, anything keto is just the worst diet known to man, you are rapidly developing atherosclerosis faster than SAD could produce.

  • @JaniceMckiernan
    @JaniceMckiernan Місяць тому

    watching from Mesa AZ

  • @yalaiponthai
    @yalaiponthai Місяць тому +3

    SINGAPORE!

  • @skipkat5186
    @skipkat5186 Місяць тому +5

    I'm 56. My LDL is 100. My Triglyceride 52. Cholesterol 160. BP 132/80. My CAC score 0. Am I doomed?

    • @timshel011
      @timshel011 Місяць тому +9

      Get your affairs in order ...you only have another 99 years left. LOL😂

    • @sf4769
      @sf4769 Місяць тому +7

      lol with 0 CAC... the one thing doctors in my country wont check before prescribing statins....

    • @derekmilani8887
      @derekmilani8887 Місяць тому +1

      Soft plaque Be aware

    • @johnfleming5470
      @johnfleming5470 Місяць тому

      I kick your ass in every blood result and my BP is 105/55 , glucose 75 and my CAC is around 800. So much for great blood tests

    • @nickma71
      @nickma71 Місяць тому +4

      Yes. Your low cholesterol is a bio marker for not living a long time. This dude actually covered it in a video not too long ago. High cholesterol, high iron (red meat diet) and low glucose is the key to long life.

  • @thomasowens5824
    @thomasowens5824 Місяць тому +1

    Long distance running is not good, short bursts of speed better.

  • @paulawagstaff686
    @paulawagstaff686 Місяць тому +2

    You can get an app that let's you know where people are tuning in from.

  • @rajeshparimkayala6435
    @rajeshparimkayala6435 Місяць тому +1

    Yes able to hear you

  • @Miraak1868
    @Miraak1868 Місяць тому

    Atherosclerotic plaque is essentially a healing mechanism to repair damaged artery walls because of eating sugar and seed oils, both inflammatory agents. As more damage occurs, logically, more plaque will continue to cover the damage.

  • @dellgidley
    @dellgidley 23 дні тому

    Just watched this during my treadmill workout. Great information! Working on lowering my BP and Insulin resistance (10.6). My triglycerides are 99 BUT my HDL is 26. Looking for a video that addresses this ratio. Again great stuff.

    • @paulasykes4690
      @paulasykes4690 2 дні тому

      Continue to increase your exercising on the treadmill and add good fats-Avocados, almonds, nuts and extra virgin olive oil on salads. I put 2 tbsp in my smoothie everyday.
      My HDL used to be 40 which is optimal but now it’s 78 because increased my good fats and I walk EVERYDAY.
      Good luck in your healthy journey.😊

  • @AI-vs7sm
    @AI-vs7sm Місяць тому

    Great that you stuck the electrolytes ad in the middle of the video! One of the first things I learned in the keto / low carb space is that glucose holds water the same as salt. But, they want you to lower your salt intake! The obvious point here? Salt is a necessary electrolyte, but, carbs, which add excess glucose to the bloodstream, ARE NOT ESSENTIAL!!! So, excess glucose from carbs ,in addition to the essential salt , that needs to be there, is doubling the volume in the stream! Voila, instant high blood pressure! Cut out the carbs, which cuts out the excess glucose, as well as pre diabetes, lowers the insults to the artery wall.

  • @lindag9975
    @lindag9975 Місяць тому

    Diabetes and prw-diabetes are by far the greatest causes of heart attacks. High LDL is just a small sliver on the pie chart. It's also way below obesity, smoking, and other lifestyle risks.
    I agree with you that high LDL is associative and not causative.
    Meanwhile we can correct a lot of these problems by clean eating. Many of us need to switch to an anti-inflammatory based diet where we cut out the junk foods that are causing inflammation in our bodies, and then add in foods that fight inflammation.