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  #1   ^
Old Sat, Apr-21-07, 10:15
kebaldwin kebaldwin is offline
Thank you Dr Atkins!
Posts: 4,146
 
Plan: Atkins induction
Stats: 311/250/220 Male 6 feet
BF:45%/20%/15%
Progress: 67%
Location: North Carolina
Default Women Don't Need Cholesterol Drugs...

Al Sears, MD
12794 Forest Hill Blvd., Suite 16
Wellington, FL 33414

April 19, 2007

Dear Reader,

Women continue to die in record numbers from heart disease. But don’t expect the American Heart Association to give you the answers. Their new guidelines for women sound like they came from directly from the mouths of drug companies and processed food makers.

Their advice? Avoid nutritional supplements… take aspirin… eat more low-fat foods… and have your doctor “monitor” your cholesterol. That’s just asking to be handed a cholesterol-lowering drugs.

This advice is troubling. Cholesterol doesn’t cause heart disease in the first place. Cholesterol is the thing that heart disease acts upon. It’s the oxidation and inflammation that’s the disease. Secondly, many of the nutritional supplements they’re telling you to avoid – like vitamin E – are clinically supported as effective for treating heart disease.

In The Doctor’s Heart Cure, there’s a wealth of material that backs this up. Like the two big studies published in the New England Journal of Medicine.1,2 They showed that people who took vitamin E for at least two years had about a 40 percent (41 percent in women; 37 percent in men) lower risk of developing heart disease.

Last week, one of my patients told me she heard a doctor talking about these new guidelines on “Good Morning America.” The doctor said that women at risk for heart disease should get their LDL (bad cholesterol) below 70! He failed to mention this is nearly impossible unless you take statin drugs.

Many doctors put their patients on statin cholesterol drugs without even considering the alternatives. And this can be dangerous – especially for women.

For heart disease, women have different risk factors than men. What’s more, statin drugs are even less effective for women. Currently, there’s no evidence that lowering cholesterol in women with no history of heart disease has any benefit.

Two other factors – triglycerides and HDL – are far more important for women than total cholesterol or LDL (bad cholesterol). Unfortunately, most doctors still recommend drugs when they see a “high” LDL from a woman’s blood test.

If you’re a woman with high total cholesterol, before you accept any drug therapy, ask your doctor to measure the following 6 tests:

Triglycerides
Insulin
HDL Cholesterol
Blood Pressure
Fasting Blood Glucose
Waist Size
A simple blood test will do the trick. This complete picture will tell if any treatment is necessary and if so how to address the problem without drugs.

Remember… HDL is your trump card – especially for women. Keep that number high to stay out of danger.

The best way to raise HDL is with exercises like my PACE program. And if your triglycerides are high, drive them down. You can do this by decreasing starchy, hi-carb foods.

To Your Good Health,

Al Sears, MD

1 Stampfer MJ, et al. Vitamin E consumption and the risk of coronary disease in women. New England Journal of Medicine. 1993 May 20; 328(20):1444-1449.

2 Rimm EB, et al. Vitamin E consumption and the risk of coronary heart disease in men. New England Journal of Medicine. 1993 May 20; 328(20):1450-1456.

http://www.alsearsmd.net/
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  #2   ^
Old Sat, Apr-21-07, 10:53
craney's Avatar
craney craney is offline
Senior Member
Posts: 457
 
Plan: atkins
Stats: 185/147.5/130 Female 5'1 1/2
BF:
Progress: 68%
Location: South Carolina
Default

This is why I quit taking my Lipitor. I don't trust those drugs, and I have read similar studies. LC'ing should (in time) lower my numbers. My doctor is having a fit, but I am still refusing to go back on the med.
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  #3   ^
Old Sat, Apr-21-07, 12:36
Daryl's Avatar
Daryl Daryl is offline
Senior Member
Posts: 7,427
 
Plan: ZC
Stats: 260/222/170 Male 5-10
BF:Huh?
Progress: 42%
Location: Texas
Default

Great post, Keith, thanks.
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  #4   ^
Old Sat, Apr-21-07, 12:40
Cissie_12's Avatar
Cissie_12 Cissie_12 is offline
Senior Member
Posts: 1,238
 
Plan: 30 or less daily
Stats: 232.2/214.4/169 Female 68
BF:[url=http://www.Ti
Progress: 28%
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I have to admit this still worries me. My doctor wanted me to try dieting for a couple months to see if my levels improve then If NOT he wants me to try meds. I go next week for tests to see how I'm doing. Praying for big improvements. It's sooooooo confusing to know exactly what to do. I believe a lot of people turn to the drugs out of fear of not taking them. Doctors can really be intemidating...
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  #5   ^
Old Sat, Apr-21-07, 14:05
kebaldwin kebaldwin is offline
Thank you Dr Atkins!
Posts: 4,146
 
Plan: Atkins induction
Stats: 311/250/220 Male 6 feet
BF:45%/20%/15%
Progress: 67%
Location: North Carolina
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cissie_12
I have to admit this still worries me. My doctor wanted me to try dieting for a couple months to see if my levels improve then If NOT he wants me to try meds. I go next week for tests to see how I'm doing. Praying for big improvements. It's sooooooo confusing to know exactly what to do. I believe a lot of people turn to the drugs out of fear of not taking them. Doctors can really be intemidating...


If you have been following the diet - then 2 months is all it takes for bad things in your blood to improve.

Now your BUN level will probably go way up and they will freak out about that ... but that is normal for a low carb diet. They'll do a liver/kidney test and then be puzzled why your BUN is high but liver and kidney are fine.
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  #6   ^
Old Sat, Apr-21-07, 14:15
Cissie_12's Avatar
Cissie_12 Cissie_12 is offline
Senior Member
Posts: 1,238
 
Plan: 30 or less daily
Stats: 232.2/214.4/169 Female 68
BF:[url=http://www.Ti
Progress: 28%
Default

Thanks for letting me know this ahead of time. I've been on this woe since Jan. 24th. of this year so I guess it's time to get my new results! I just want to be healthy!!! On a good note, my new GP is familiar with LC and says he keeps his weight off by going on SBD every now and then so hopefully he will understand if my BUN level is high. Hmm guess I need to look up BUN and see what it is!? lol

Thanks again!
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  #7   ^
Old Sat, Apr-21-07, 14:29
kebaldwin kebaldwin is offline
Thank you Dr Atkins!
Posts: 4,146
 
Plan: Atkins induction
Stats: 311/250/220 Male 6 feet
BF:45%/20%/15%
Progress: 67%
Location: North Carolina
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cissie_12
Hmm guess I need to look up BUN and see what it is!? !

Most people on low carb get freaked out when their doctor sees their BUN levels and tell them that their kidneys and/or liver is failing. A high BUN level is completely normal on high protein diet and should be expected. Additional liver and kidney tests will show they are fine. See this thread.

http://forum.lowcarber.org/showthread.php?t=324749
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