Reducing High Cholesterol Naturally!

Updated on January 22, 2014
B.K. asks from Purchase, NY
6 answers

My dad had his third heart attack today. He use to be on a few different (at different times) cholesterol reducing drugs and they make him feel horrible. He couldn't take it! So he went off of them and tried to just eat clean and stay away from trans fats and other bad things. He looked so sad today talking about the fact that he will have to go back on those drugs. There has to be a natural way to get it down? His cholesterol was above 400.
I'm looking for any advice!
I've heard great things about eating a paleo diet. Anyone have experience with this?

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O.O.

answers from Los Angeles on

Look, your dad has heart disease.
He's had 3 heart attacks! (I'm sorry!)
This isn't the time to be trying cider vinegar or the like.
This is the time for serious medication.
Statins do that.
My mother is thin as a rail, eats like a rabbit and without a statin? Her cholesterol soars. She didn't like the side effects either. She decided to stop taking it. Her cholesterol got very, very high. Her doc have her a different statin.
Have him talk to his doc about the specific side effects so they can work together to find the right medication for him.
All the best to your dad!

8 moms found this helpful
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D..

answers from Miami on

Aww B., I'm so terribly sorry.

Your father needs to work with a NEW doctor if he doesn't feel that he can tell the doctor "change my medicine". Stopping the medicine when he has a number like 400 is just asking for a heart attack.

He needs to be working with a nutritionist, and the doctor needs to be finding the RIGHT medication for him. Not every statin is the same. I don't think that food alone will help his arteries.

He very well may need surgery to unblock his arteries, or at least stents. Three heart attacks is very scary. He and the whole family need to understand that this is extremely serious. I really mean that.

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D.B.

answers from Boston on

These statin drugs are a huge problem for so many people. There's a lot that can be done though, using other methods. Have you done any reason on food science or the natural soy peptide that has had so many clinical trials for cholesterol reduction (as well as other health benefits)? There is a supplement that has been reducing cholesterol for years, but research has helped to identify that key ingredient, which is a soy peptide. This peptide is usually removed and actually discarded during the processing of standard soy products, so like most processed foods, the benefits are removed before the food hits the store shelves. But in non-GMO soy, the peptide can be concentrated and taken by itself if it's mechanically extracted from the soybean (vs. chemically removed, as in most food processing). The most recent trials have shown that a combination of the original supplement that contains this peptide as one ingredient (taken instead of standard vitamins or multi-vitamins or mineral supplements) and with additional peptide added, can reduce cholesterol at astounding rates. Because it's metabolized as food, the body can take as much of it as the person wants - there's no overdosing possible. One of my many colleagues was very healthy his whole life, is a sports professional, exercises regularly, etc. He brought his cholesterol down over 100 points with the supplement before the peptide was isolated. By adding additional peptide (in a vegetable-based capsule), he brought it down another 50 or 60 points. And that was without making any changes in his diet or exercise regimen. I've been to conferences and seminars and have met a number of people who have had similar or even greater reductions.

We've seen cholesterol reductions of hundreds of points in a few months, with no side effects. If you want some links on this, I can suggest some websites and give you more info. There is also some new information from heart surgeons about how the low-fat, "low cholesterol" diets have done little but produce another generation of heavier, sicker people with more heart disease. So it's not clear that we've done ourselves any favors - there have been articles published, and Dr. Oz had a segment just within the last few months in which he said that he, as a heart surgeon, may have been telling patients the wrong things all along.

The paleo diet has come under criticism because it's really not based on what our prehistoric ancestors ate - yes, it's heavy on meats and vegetables and fruits, but those items (particularly the meats) are not the same as what they were tens of thousands of years ago. Our meat is not free-range, it's largely from corn-fed animals, for example. Even the free range animals are exposed to things the ancient animals were not. The main advantage to free range eating seems to be that the person avoids processed foods. It's not an easy diet to stay with, and even so, I'm not sure he's going to get a 200 point reduction.

4 moms found this helpful

J.S.

answers from Hartford on

My best suggestion? A new cardiologist who will work with a nutritionist or dietitian that will work one on one with your dad to help him figure out his diet and which cholesterols and fats are healthy and which ones are not... because not all cholesterol is bad for you. Not all fat is bad. Too few calories is actually dangerous. So he needs a team of doctors that work well together and give him current information, not the outdated diet information from the 70's and 80's.

3 moms found this helpful

R.X.

answers from Houston on

Thank you for posting on behalf of your dad. Try to cut out one food at a time. For me, it was potato chips in November. Now that I have come to grip with that loss. It's been no ice cream since January 1. I have high cholesterol and I need to pass a medical check next month in order to get a job. I do this in addition to the meds.

I also take Red Rice Yeast pills, but he does not need or want another pill.

Blessings to your dad and to you.

3 moms found this helpful
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G.B.

answers from Oklahoma City on

You know what, sometimes our bodies just have high cholesterol. He may have to choose to take meds or die. It's a choice after all.

If his diet is good and it's not making a difference at all then he's going to have to find a med that doesn't make him feel so badly. Cholesterol that high needs meds to get it down. Then diet and exercise can have a fighting chance to keep it there and decrease the meds some but probably never all the way down.

Some cholesterol meds make people hurt, so badly they can't get out of bed and lay there writhing. That's a serious side effect and is signifying the med is wrong and they need to go to the doc right away. Some meds make them feel really angry or weepy or lethargic. Each side effect helps the doc narrow down which family of cholesterol drugs the person has to stay away from.

If dad had a bad temper to begin with and was taking one that made him feel angry all the time of course that one is a no go but if he took the one that made him feel perhaps weepy then it could make his temper less....see what I mean? Some side effects are side effects that could make like a little easier and livable where other side effects are not desirable at all. Truth is, he needs the meds to live. Finding the med that has the side effects that are the easiest to accommodate is the best thing. He'll get used to the med and eventually he won't notice them so much.

Of course a nutritionist will help. That's a good thing to do any way.

BUT BUT BUT we've seen a couple of them for free through the hospital after a heart attack or something like that and they were stuck on "There's only ONE heart diet and it's blah blah blah blah". The same diet does NOT work the same for everyone. So dad might need to see a couple until he finds one that works with him and looks at the results of his food intake and his blood work together to see if this or that works.

2 moms found this helpful
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