| Cholesterol is not the major
culprit in heart disease or any disease. If it becomes oxidized
it can irritate/inflame tissues in which it is lodged in, such
as the endothelium (lining of the arteries). This would be one
of numerous causes of chronic inflammation that can injure the
lining of arteries. However, many good fats are easily oxidized
such as omega-3 fatty acids, but it does not mean that you
should avoid it at all costs.
Common sense would indicate that we should avoid the
oxidation (rancidity) of cholesterol and fatty acids and not get
rid of important life-giving molecules. Using the same
conventional medical thinking that is being used for cholesterol
would lead one to believe that doctors should reduce the risk of
Alzheimer's disease by taking out everybody's brain.
In fact, cholesterol is being transported to tissues as part
of an inflammatory response that is there to repair damage.
The fixation on cholesterol as a major cause of heart disease
defies the last 15 years of science and deflects from real
causes such as the damage (via glycation) that sugars such as
glucose and fructose inflict on tissues, including the lining of
arteries, causing chronic inflammation and resultant plaque.
Insulin & Leptin Resistance
Hundreds of excellent scientific articles have linked insulin
resistance and more recently leptin resistance to cardiovascular
disease much more strongly than cholesterol, and they are in
fact at least partially responsible for cholesterol
abnormalities. For instance, insulin and leptin resistance
result in "small dense" LDL particles and a greater number of
particles.
This is much more important than the total cholesterol
number. Because of particle size shift to small and dense, the
total LDL cholesterol could still be low even though the number
of particles and the density of the particles is greater. Small,
dense LDL particles can squeeze between the cells lining the
inside of the arteries, the "gap junction" of the endothelium,
where they can get struck and potentially oxidize, turn rancid,
and cause inflammation of the lining of the arteries and plaque
formation.
Importantly, many solid scientific studies have shown a
mechanistic, causal effect of elevated insulin and leptin on
heart and vascular disease, whereas almost all studies with
cholesterol misleadingly only show an association. Association
does not imply cause. For instance, something else may be
causing lipid abnormalities such as elevated cholesterol and
triglycerides, and also causing heart disease.
This "something else" is improper insulin and leptin
signaling. Similarly, sugar does not cause diabetes; sugar is
just listening to orders. Improper insulin and leptin signaling
is the cause of diabetes. Likewise, cholesterol does not cause
heart disease, but improper metabolic signals including improper
signals to cholesterol (causing it to oxidize) and perhaps to
the liver that manufactures the cholesterol, will cause heart
and vascular disease and hypertension.
Removing cholesterol will do nothing to improve the
underlying problems, the real roots of chronic disease, which
will always have to do with improper communication, and the
generals of metabolic communication are insulin and leptin. They
are really what must be treated to reverse heart disease,
diabetes, osteoporosis, obesity, and to some extent aging
itself.
Cholesterol; Wrongly Accused?
Before we can begin to talk about the real cause and
effective treatment for heart and blood vessel disease, we must
first look at what is known, or I should say what we think we
know. The first thing that comes to mind when one hears about
heart disease is almost always cholesterol. Cholesterol and
heart disease has been almost synonymous for the last
half-century. Cholesterol has been portrayed as the Darth Vader
to our arteries and our heart.
The latest recommendation given by a so-called panel of
"experts" recommends that a person's cholesterol be as low as
possible, in fact to a level so low they say it cannot be
achieved by diet, exercise, or any known lifestyle modification.
Therefore, they say cholesterol-lowering drugs; particularly the
so-called "statins" need to be given to anyone at high risk of
heart disease. Since heart disease is the number one killer in
this country that would include most adults and even many
children. The fact that this might add to the $26 billion in
sales of statin drugs last year I'm sure played no role in their
recommendations.
Or did it?
Expert Conflict of Interests
Major consumer groups think so. They found out that eight of
the nine "experts" that made the recommendations were on the
payroll of pharmaceutical companies that manufacture those
drugs. Major scientific organizations have chastised medical
journals for allowing the pharmaceutical industry to publish
misleading results and half-truths. There is a major push under
way to force the pharmaceutical industry (and others) to publish
results of all of their studies, and not just the ones that
appear positive. The studies that showed negative results would
be forced to be published also.
It could be that lowering cholesterol might not be as healthy
as we are being told. More and more studies are coming out
showing just how unhealthy lowering cholesterol might be,
particularly by the use of statin drugs. In particular, statin
drugs have been shown to be harmful to muscles causing
considerable damage. A common symptom of this damage is muscular
aches and pains that many patients experience on
cholesterol-lowering drugs, however most do not realize that
these drugs are to blame.
Hmm...isn't the heart a muscle?
Statin Drugs Actually Increase Heart Disease
Indeed, low cholesterol levels have been shown to worsen
patients with congestive heart failure, a life-threatening
condition where the heart becomes too weak to effectively pump
blood. Statin drugs have been shown to also cause nerve damage
and to greatly impair memory. One reason that statin drugs have
these various serious side effects is that they work by
inhibiting a vital enzyme that manufactures cholesterol in the
liver. However, the same enzyme is used to manufacture coenzyme
Q10, which is a biochemical needed to transfer energy from food
to our cells to be used for the work of staying alive and
healthy.
Statin drugs are known to inhibit our very important
production of coenzyme Q10. Importantly, while many
cardiologists insist that lowering cholesterol is correlated
with a reduction in the risk of heart attacks; few can say that
there is a reduction in the risk of mortality (death). That has
been much harder to show. In other words it has never been
conclusively shown that lowering cholesterol saves lives. In
fact, several large studies have shown that lowering cholesterol
into the range currently recommended is correlated with an
increased risk of dying, especially of cancer.
No Such Thing as Good and Bad Cholesterol
Because the correlation of total cholesterol with heart
disease is so weak, many years ago a stronger correlation was
sought. It was found that there is so-called "good cholesterol"
called HDL, and that the so-called "bad cholesterol" was LDL.
HDL stands for high-density lipoprotein, and LDL stands for
low-density lipoprotein. Notice please that LDL and HDL are
lipoproteins -- fats combined with proteins. There is only one
cholesterol. There is no such thing as a good or a bad
cholesterol. Cholesterol is just cholesterol. It combines with
other fats and proteins to be carried through the bloodstream,
since fat and our watery blood do not mix very well.
Fatty substances therefore must be shuttled to and from our
tissues and cells using proteins. LDL and HDL are forms of
proteins and are far from being just cholesterol. In fact we now
know there are many types of these fat and protein particles.
LDL particles come in many sizes and large LDL particles are not
a problem. Only the so-called small dense LDL particles can
potentially be a problem, because they can squeeze through the
lining of the arteries and if they oxidize, otherwise known as
turning rancid, they can cause damage and inflammation. Thus,
you might say that there is "good LDL" and "bad LDL." Also, some
HDL particles are better than others. Knowing just your total
cholesterol tells you very little. Even knowing your LDL and HDL
levels do not tell you very much.
A mistake that is rarely made in the hard-core sciences such
as physics seems to be frequently made in medicine. This is
confusing correlation with cause. There may be a weak
correlation of elevated cholesterol with heart attacks, however
this does not mean it is the cholesterol that caused the heart
attack. Certainly gray hair is correlated with getting older;
however one could hardly say that the gray hair caused one to
get old. Using hair dye to reduce the gray hair would not really
make you any younger. Neither it appears would just lowering
your cholesterol.
Perhaps something else is causing both the gray hair and
aging. Even if elevated cholesterol were significant and heart
disease (which I question) perhaps something else is causing the
elevated cholesterol and also causing the heart disease.
Let's look little more at cholesterol or, as Paul Harvey was
fond of saying, "the rest of the story." First and foremost,
cholesterol is a vital component of every cell membrane on
Earth. In other words, there is no life on Earth they can live
without cholesterol. That will automatically tell you that, in
of itself, it cannot be evil. In fact it is one of our best
friends. We would not be here without it. No wonder lowering
cholesterol too much increases one's risk of dying. Cholesterol
also is a precursor to all of the steroid hormones. You cannot
make estrogen, testosterone, cortisone, and a host of other
vital hormones without cholesterol.
Cholesterol Is The Hero, Not The Villain.
It was determined many years ago that the majority of
cholesterol in your bloodstream comes from what your liver is
manufacturing and distributing. The amount of cholesterol that
one eats plays little role in determining your cholesterol
levels. It is also known that HDL shuttles cholesterol away from
tissues, and away from your arteries, back to your liver. That
is why HDL is called the "good cholesterol;" because it is
supposedly taking cholesterol away from your arteries. But let's
think about that.
· Why does your liver make sure that you have
plenty of cholesterol?
· Why is HDL taking cholesterol back to your
liver?
· Why not take it right to your kidneys, or
your intestines to get rid of it?
It is taking it back to your liver so that your liver can
recycle it; put it back into other particles to be taken to
tissues and cells that need it. Your body is trying to make and
conserve the cholesterol for the precise reason that it is so
important, indeed vital, for health.
One function of cholesterol is to keep your cell membranes
from falling apart. As such, you might consider cholesterol your
cells "superglue." It is a necessary ingredient in any sort of
cellular repair. The coronary disease associated with heart
attacks is now known to be caused from damage to the lining of
those arteries. That damage causes inflammation. The coronary
disease that causes heart attacks is now considered to be caused
mostly from chronic inflammation.
What Is Inflammation?
Think of what happens if you were to cut your hand. Within a
fraction of a second, chemicals are released by the damaged
tissue to initiate the process known as inflammation.
Inflammation will allow that little cut to heal, and indeed to
keep you from dying. The cut blood vessels constrict to keep you
from bleeding too much. Blood becomes "thicker" so that it can
clot. Cells and chemicals from the immune system are alerted to
come to the area to keep intruders such as viruses and bacteria
from invading the cut. Other cells are told to multiply to
repair the damage so that you can heal. When the repair is
completed, you have lived to be careless another day, though you
may have a small scar to show for your troubles.
We now know that similar events take place within the lining
of our arteries. When damage occurs to the lining of our
arteries (or even elsewhere) chemicals are released to initiate
the process of inflammation. Arteries constrict, blood becomes
more prone to clot, white blood cells are called to the area to
gobble up damaged debris, and cells adjacent to those damaged
are told to multiply. Ultimately, scars form, however inside our
arteries we call it plaque. And the constriction of our arteries
and the "thickening" of our blood further predisposes us to high
blood pressure and heart attacks.
So Where Might Cholesterol Fit Into All Of This?
When damage is occurring and inflammation is being initiated,
chemicals are being released so that that damage can be
repaired. One could speculate that to replace damaged, old and
worn-out cells the liver needs to be notified to either recycle
or manufacture cholesterol since no cell, human or otherwise,
can be made without it. In this case, cholesterol is being
manufactured and distributed in your bloodstream to help you
repair damaged tissue and in fact to keep you alive.
If excessive damage is occurring such that it is necessary to
distribute extra cholesterol through the bloodstream, it would
not seem very wise to merely lower the cholesterol and forget
about why it is there in the first place. It would seem much
smarter to reduce the extra need for the cholesterol -- the
excessive damage that is occurring, the reason for the chronic
inflammation.
So Why Take Cholesterol-Lowering Drugs?
The pharmaceutical companies thought that you might think
that. They went back to the drawing board. They did more
"research" and found (coincidentally) that statin drugs had
anti-inflammatory effects. Therefore we're currently being told
to stay on our cholesterol-lowering drugs because now they work
by reducing inflammation and perhaps not even by reducing
cholesterol, and in fact perhaps in spite of it. Aspirin reduces
inflammation for a lot less money. So does vitamin E, and fish
oil, and dietary changes without the dangers of drugs and having
many other benefits instead.
What About Triglycerides?
Triglycerides are just medical terminology for fat. A person
with high triglycerides has a lot of fat in the bloodstream.
Triglycerides are generally measured when a person has fasted
overnight. High fasting triglycerides are either from
manufacturing too much, or using (burning) too little. In other
words, what high triglycerides are telling you is that you are
making too much fat and you are unable to burn it. This indeed
is a major problem. The inability to burn fat underlies
virtually all of the chronic diseases of aging, and in fact may
contribute to the rate of aging itself.
As such, one might think that the control all fat burning and
storage might be very important in heart disease, and the other
diseases of aging such as diabetes, obesity, osteoporosis, and
even cancer. Indeed, this appears to very much be the case. The
two hormones that to a major extent control our ability to burn
and store fat, insulin and leptin, appear to play a major role
in all of the chronic diseases of aging. I would call them the
most important hormones, indeed chemicals in the entire body.
But that is a story for next time. |