The Good, The Bad - And The Ugly Cholesterol That Causes Heart Disease

Main Category: Cholesterol
Also Included In: Heart Disease;  Obesity / Weight Loss / Fitness
Article Date: 23 Jan 2013 - 0:00 PST

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The Good, The Bad - And The Ugly Cholesterol That Causes Heart Disease

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4.25 (4 votes)

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4.67 (3 votes)

Article opinions: 2 posts

The risk of ischaemic heart disease - a disease affecting some 150,000 Danes - is three times higher in persons with high levels of the so-called 'ugly' cholesterol. This is the finding of a new study of 73,000 Danes, which is shedding light on a long debate on this topic. The results have just been published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Most Danes are aware that high cholesterol is life-threatening. But very few know which type of cholesterol is the most frequent killer. Cholesterol is divided into 'the good' HDL cholesterol, 'the bad' LDL cholesterol and 'the ugly' cholesterol. It is the so-called 'ugly cholesterol' - also called 'remnant-like particle cholesterol' - that is the really bad guy.

"LDL cholesterol or 'the bad' cholesterol' is of course bad, but our new study reveals that the ugly cholesterol is the direct cause of arteriosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) resulting in ischaemic heart disease and early death. By examining 73,000 persons, we found that an increase in the ugly cholesterol triples the risk of ischaemic heart disease, which is caused by lack of oxygen to the heart muscle due to narrowing or blocking of the coronary arteries," says Professor Børge Nordestgaard, chief physician at Herlev Hospital and Clinical Professor at the Faculty of Health Sciences at the University of Copenhagen.

"I hope that this new knowledge will lead to better preventive treatment, as more than one in five Danes suffers from high ugly cholesterol. We also hope that the pharmaceutical industry will develop new drugs targeted specifically at raised ugly cholesterol levels," he emphasises.

Widespread disease worldwide

In Denmark alone, 20,000 persons are diagnosed with ischaemic heart disease every year, and some 150,000 Danes are currently affected by the disease. According to World Health Organization estimates, 17 million people fall victim to cardiovascular disease - the most frequent cause of death in the world.

"High ugly cholesterol is the result of high blood levels of normal fat (triglycerides). The most important cause of high ugly cholesterol is overweight and obesity. Persons with high ugly cholesterol should therefore be advised to lose weight, but drugs such as statins and fibrates may also lower levels of ugly cholesterol in the blood," says Børge Nordestgaard.

Samples from 73,000 Danes with genetic defect

Anette Varbo, physician and PhD student at Herlev Hospital, has been part of the research team behind the new findings. She says that the findings shed light on a long-standing debate among researchers on the so-called triglyceride, arteriosclerosis and cholesterol.

"To be able to examine the correlation between ugly cholesterol and heart disease, we have used blood samples from persons having a genetic defect which means that they suffer from high ugly cholesterol their entire life. The research findings do therefore not depend on their lifestyle patterns in general. Unhealthy lifestyle factors such as smoking, fatty foods and overweight all increase the risk of heart disease, and the blood samples from persons having this genetic defect thus give the most accurate results," says Anette Varbo.

Facts about cholesterol:

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our cholesterol section for the latest news on this subject.
The scientific article is based on the following three population studies: the Herlev-Østerbro study, the Østerbro study and the Copenhagen heart study.
Fact Sources: The Danish Heart Foundation and the medical compendium Medicinsk Kompendium.
University of Copenhagen
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)

Drugs not the answer, use proven dietary approaches

posted by Richard Beeman on 30 Jan 2013 at 11:12 am

Authors such as Nathan Pritikin, Dean Ornish, M.D., and Joel Fuhrman, M.D. have already proven through their research and personal experience treating patients over the last 20-30 years that the answer to weight loss, reversal of atherosclerotic plaque and reduction of all the major markers for poor medical health such as high blood pressure and high cholesterol, can be accomplished with intensive diet and exercise. Of course, the reason most physicians prescribe drugs is because this is easier and more likely to make them feel they have helped the patient. In fact, the cascade of drugs given to diabetics often are the source of continuing problems. The statement "You can lower your blood cholesterol level by eating a low-fat diet and avoiding overweight." should be changed to: "you can lower you blood cholesterol by not eating any animal protein, eating much smaller amounts of only complex carbohydrates and concentrating on nutritionally dense green vegetables." I would add: also exercise 30-60 minutes every day and eat less than 1000 grams of sodium per day. In the end, we have allowed the food marketers of the world to convert our dietary practices to an extremely unhealthy model. The question is, can the people in a position to change this find a way to do this or will we continue to eat like insensible gluttons without a clue or a shred of self discipline because the mass media tells us we should? Will physicians continue to take the easy way out and write prescriptions or see the light and learn about the latest data on good nutrition and take the time to find ways to assist their patients to take this road?

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high triglycerides occur are the result of people with insulin resistance eating a high carb diet

posted by Clint Primoff on 23 Jan 2013 at 11:29 am

According to the article, triglycerides are correlated to remnant-like particle density, then it is recommended that a low fat diet be used to reduce triglyceride. THIS IS PROFOUNDLY IGNORANT. High triglycerides occur in people with insulin resistance / diabetes on a high carb diet. Let me repeat, high triglycerides occur are the result of people with insulin resistance eating a high carb diet. Every single diet study comparing low carb to high carb diets has shown a dramatic reduction in triglycerides on the low carb diet compared to a high carb diet. EVERY SINGLE STUDY. Telling someone with insulin resistance to go on a low fat diet to bring down triglycerides could be a death sentence to them.

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