Lifestyle Changes
Eating a sensible diet low in
saturated fat, trans fat, and cholesterol, getting moderate exercise, and
losing excess weight are important ways you can lower your
high cholesterol level. For many people, these
lifestyle changes may be all that is needed to decrease
LDL cholesterol and raise
HDL cholesterol.
If high cholesterol runs
in your family, you may not be able to reduce your cholesterol level by
following a strict diet and exercise routine only. In this case, you may need
to take medicine.
As part of the treatment for high cholesterol,
your doctor may recommend using the
Therapeutic Lifestyle Changes (TLC) recommended by the
National Cholesterol Education Program of the U.S. National Institutes of
Health.
These lifestyle changes recommend:
The TLC diet is low in
saturated fat and cholesterol. Less than 7% of your
daily calories should come from saturated fat, and you should limit your
cholesterol to no more than 200 milligrams a day.
Saturated fat
and cholesterol are in foods that come from animals, such as meats, poultry,
fish, whole milk, egg yolks, butter, and cheese.
Trans fat is found in fried foods and packaged foods,
such as cookies, crackers, and chips.
The TLC plan also
recommends increasing the amount of
fiber you eat and adding plant stanols and sterols to
your diet.
Plant sterols are found in small quantities in many
fruits, vegetables, nuts, seeds, cereals, legumes, and other plant sources.
Plant stanols come from some of the same sources. Vegetable oils, for example,
contain both plant sterols and plant stanols. You can also find them in some
salad dressings and
margarines, such as Benecol and Take Control. They are
safe for children who have genetic high cholesterol, but pregnant women need to
avoid them.
For more information about the TLC diet, see:
You might also consider following the
Mediterranean diet, which is similar to the TLC diet.
On the Mediterranean diet, an average of 35% of calories can come from fat,
mainly from unsaturated oils, such as fish oils, olive oil, and certain nut or
seed oils (such as canola, soybean, or flaxseed oil).
See the
following for more information about food and high cholesterol:
Not recommended for reducing cholesterol
- Garlic. Studies have
shown that eating lots of garlic or taking garlic supplements does not
effectively lower cholesterol levels. Eating too much garlic can have side
effects, including allergic reaction, gas (flatulence), heartburn, garlic odor
from the skin, interference with some drugs, and longer blood-clotting
time.
- Very low-fat diets. Although very
low-fat diets may indeed lower cholesterol levels, they are not recommended.
Very low-fat diets usually allow less than 15% of total calories from fat. In
comparison, a
cholesterol-reducing diet allows 25% to 35% of
calories to come from total fat, with 7% from saturated fat. A diet with less
than 25% of its calories from fat can increase triglycerides and decrease HDL
(good) cholesterol. Such a diet may deplete your body of other important
nutrients and vitamins.
- Policosanol.
Policosanol, which is made from sugar cane, has not been shown to lower
cholesterol.6