Association between triglyceride-to-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio and prediabetes: a cross-sectional study in Chinese non-obese people with a normal range of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol | Journal of Translational Medicine
translational-medicine.biomedcentral.comSubmitted by Meatrition t3_yb8wo4 in science
BafangFan t1_itfc4xj wrote
LDL cholesterol is frequently believed to be the "bad" cholesterol, and is also the cholesterol that is affected by saturated fat consumption.
Anywhere from 50-75% of people who have heart attacks have normal cholesterol levels, including LDL cholesterol.
So how good of a predictor of heart disease is LDL, and why have we put so much emphasis on lowering LDL when it seems to have little bearing on our heart disease risk?
My triglycerides were at one point 1,200 (whatever the unit is). I have lowered that by 80% through low carb, high fat diets and fasting.
Carb intake has had a far greater impact on my cholesterol ratios than protein and fat does - and yet the advice is to always avoid fats - especially saturated fat.