Dr. Paul Saladino: "Don't worry about elevated Cholesterol."
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References:
[1] doi: 10.1146/annurev.micro.55.1.165
[2] doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1501835
[3] doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2012.09.017
[4] doi: 10.3389/fcvm.2022.860196
[5] doi:10.1001/jama.2015.1206
[6] doi: 10.3390/nu14071503
[7] doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehv157
Original Video: • Why I don’t worry abou...
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#carnivorediet #carnivore #hearthealth
Пікірлер: 1 100
Either way there is no evidence that statins reduce the risk of death from heart disease so what is your point?
@olafkunert3714
2 күн бұрын
That is nonsense. People who have a genetic disorder and produce as a result too much cholesterol die young without statins, have a normal life-span with statins. Your general statement is stupid nonsense. You can make a good case that doctors prescibe to easily statins instead of checking some aspects better and make than a data based cost-benefit analysis, but thta requires that you pay attention to details.
@winthorpe2560
2 күн бұрын
@@olafkunert3714 I read Dr Aseem Malhotra’s book. He says life expectancy is only increased by three days by taking statins. Take it up with him. Ps I ignored it and have started taking them again!
Paul Saladino doesn't even eat salad he needs to change his name to Paul Meatareno.🍖🥓
@davidflorez1196
11 ай бұрын
Meatino😂
@r.guerreiro140
11 ай бұрын
Or carnerino, maybe 😂
@Santa-ny1yp
11 ай бұрын
Wouldn't ino translate to little? Paul littlesalad seems more correct. I'm not a linguist and too lazy to google. just a guess.
@Mk33164
11 ай бұрын
Meat-I-Yes
@simonround2439
11 ай бұрын
He does eat an absolute ton of fruit though
This LDL controversy is what concerns me the most about the carnivore diet. However, the association shown is some studies are always in the range of 00% to 30% max, which is relevant, but not really that high, considering it's only association, not straight forward causality. Also, if carnivore diet manages to reduce body fat massively, normalize blood pressure, soothe inflation, make glicemy super low - among many other benefits, I think it's safe to assume that overall coronary desease risk should go down substantially, even if LDL level is increased.
@NickM89
9 ай бұрын
I never liked vegetables or had a sweet tooth so I’ve been doing carnivore with dairy for 25 years without knowing it was a healthy diet. My family’s genetics have high cholesterol. Mines always high, but I have no plaque in my entire body. I’ve had coronary angiogram and calcium scan 10 years ago and I was good. It’s very important to exercise on the carnivore diet. You have to burn that cholesterol in your blood so it doesn’t cause problems. That’s my logic on it.
@JoeS97756
5 ай бұрын
Carnivore is not the only diet that can do those things.
@llicit1833
5 ай бұрын
You would be wise to be concerned. Carnivores tend to show weak observational studies which are easily confounded, yet never mention the much more powerful and illustrative interventional studies (which make it clear ApoB / LDL is harmful). And while improving other health markers (likely mainly through weight loss) is good, there are plenty of examples of people who are "healthy in all ways except except LDL" who go on to have a premature heart attack or stroke. Maybe check out cardiologist Dr Alo - he talks about this and bit and basically says if you like that way of eating great but if your LDL is too high just make sure you control it (multiple ways of doing it)
@bobmorane4926
5 ай бұрын
@@JoeS97756 But if it does as per many testimonials, it should be celebrated . The other diets can probably do the same but apparently they make autoimmune symptoms worse. Hence, why many prefer the carnivore which seems to have a soothing effect of the system. I really don't think the carnivores are anal about the vegans , it's usually the other way around.
@somethingelse9535
4 ай бұрын
@@JoeS97756Everyone's sensitivity to glucose is different. Going vegan can help with diseases for someone coming from a SAD diet, because they end up consuming less carbs. It's relative. If that doesn't work, going keto is even fewer carbs. Some still may not find satisfaction and moving to zero carbs, or the carnivore diet finally kills off these diseases. Of course the difference is, veganism is missing over a dozen essential nutrients and is not a long term diet. Red meat is missing precisely nothing.
This is what's wrong with social media, people rant and yell repeatedly the same assertion and somehow claim that makes it true
@Noegzit
21 күн бұрын
That's true with mainstream media too. We need to factcheck almost everything now, no matter where the claims are made.
This video did not address subgroups, other than the genetic differentiators. For those without the gene "snips" , there are basically two reasons why people have higher than average LDL particle counts; one is because the Apo-B particles get damaged; they get too oxidized, glycated, or small because of other problems, and the liver fails to recognize and recycle them, so they float aimlessly in the bloodstream, liable to get in trouble including building plaque. The other is that a person's individual metabolism is adapted to using triglycerides as a major fuel source, so more Apo-B particles are put into circulation as VLDL packed with triglycerides, which eventually become a higher number of LDL particles after they've delivered the triglycerides. Such particles, however, are recognized and recycled by the liver. This video completely ignores the issues of LDL/Apo-B particle size and health, which is the elephant in the room that any honest evaluation of the role of LDL in atherosclerosis should be focusing on. Perhaps Physionic might take up Dave Feldman's challenge of producing a good study that finds a high risk of atherosclerosis in people with ultra-high LDL but also with low fasting triglycerides and healthy HDL levels. There is a reward of thousands of dollars in the challenge. There is also the fact to consider that in the NHANES database, the 5 most long-lived people had very high LDL by current mainstream standards, and this was not measured in their final days, but was recorded as "high" for many years. Lumping very different people together based on a single, independent characteristic is not the best way to do science, as it allows false proxies to contaminate the data and conclusions. The fact is, total LDL count has so little association with atherosclerosis, that many heart risk calculators don't even ask LDL levels; the other factors are just so much more predictive, that many calculators don't bother to ask. I've played with various calculators, some of which do ask for LDL counts, and none of them changed their predictive risk as much when you changed LDL counts, as when you changed other parameters. The point that many LDL-catastrophe deniers are making is not that there is never an *individual* correlation between LDL counts or particle numbers and atherosclerosis; the point is that there are good or neutral reasons, and clearly bad reasons, why LDL might be elevated. Those which are elevated because of triglyceride delivery in a fat-burning metabolism do not have to worry about LDL if their HDL and triglycerides are healthy. If this is true, then LDL is worthless as a marker for health, and concerns of disease should concentrate on damaged LDL which does not get recycled by the liver, and not all forms of LDL.
@Metanoia_Magna
11 ай бұрын
Yup this is mind blowing.
@randyblanton5580
11 ай бұрын
Well said.
@jamescalifornia2964
11 ай бұрын
Take extra niacin to be safe 😉👌
@rosevanderreijden3216
11 ай бұрын
I have thoroughly looked at Dave Feldman's works and, while he is free to experiment upon himself, I would not be a participant. It's like rolling the dice at a craps table.
@chuckleezodiac24
11 ай бұрын
right on, bro.
To understand what's going on, watch "Dr. David Diamond: Should Low Carbohydrate Diet Guidelines Include Concerns Over LDL Cholesterol?" He explains that it's not the high LDL that is causing the trouble. It's the high *damaged* LDL. In one study in which the damaged LDL were removed, the remaining high LDL had no adverse effect.
@MAtildaMortuaryserver
6 ай бұрын
And yet the French have high carb diets, they have had riots over price increases and shortages of baguettes. They also are now the longest lived first world nation. At least Monaco which I consider French even if technically an independent principality in France, they also are one of the richest places on the planet. Life expectancy = 89.4 years. You want an odd statistic, the #5 place in the world with the highest number of people over 100 years old is LOMA LINDA in San Bernardino County in California. This is because there is a community of about 9,000 Seventh Day Adventists there and they do not smoke, drink, or eat meat, and take regular exercise. Of course they average 10 years longer life expectancy that the rest of us, but who would want 90 or more years of that?
@AndreAngelantoni
6 ай бұрын
@@MAtildaMortuaryserver the French do not have high carb diets. In fact, they eat the most saturated fat in Western Europe, primarily from all the delicious cheese they eat. Look it up.
@Noegzit
5 ай бұрын
@@MAtildaMortuaryserver I live in the South-West of France. We traditionally eat a lot of fat, including duck and goose fat, as we raise ducks and gooses to make Foie gras. Eating baguettes doesn't necessarily means having a high carb diet.
@spgtenor
Ай бұрын
@@AndreAngelantoniThe French and Italian people eat moderate to high carb diets.
@AndreAngelantoni
Ай бұрын
@@spgtenor the French eat more fat than perhaps anyone. That's why it's called The French Paradox.
On the first point, the argument is aimed at a practicing medical audience where often the paradigm is reducing LDL as low as possible to reduce MIs and CVAs. On the vein issue, he would be referring to SVG stenosis especially compared to LIMA stenosis. The argument towards insulin resistance can't be equated directly as diabetes; though the two occur together often, they don't always occur together and obesity can be an alternate presentation that can explain many of these instances of lack of diabetes.
@2snipe1
10 ай бұрын
I believe the researchers tested in the generic trials of those with diabetes 2 because the disease is caused by insulin resistance, specifically in the beta cells of the pancreas usually from fat infiltration disrupting insulin secretion. Ergo, they definitely have insulin resistance. Although, you are correct that other muscles can have fat infiltration and thus can turn into fat cells causing insulin receptors to retreat into muscle cells.
Amazing content, keep it up!
If you are on a keto or carnivore diet or any other diet your LDL will go high just because you need to transfer a lot of fat in your body for Energy. What Saladino usually says is that LDL is only harmfull when the cause of high LDL is insulin resistance or metabolic syndrome. Genetic problems are execeptions not the rule as you made to look
@defeqel6537
11 ай бұрын
Plenty of people have normal LDL on keto/carnivore
@hugo-garcia
11 ай бұрын
@@defeqel6537 many do and many don't depending on a lot of things. In the beginning there is a spike in LDL and months later when the body gets fat adapted you need less LDL to do the same job
@pacmanfl
11 ай бұрын
…Then why does LDL skyrocket in some individuals as their BMI decreases below 25 when they may have been only slightly elevated when they were overweight?
@hugo-garcia
11 ай бұрын
@@pacmanfl because what I just said
@szymonbaranowski8184
11 ай бұрын
@@defeqel6537people do keto and carnivore with high range of fat intake these from low end compared to these on high end can be in totally different situation... not mentioning varying source of their fat in diet... even amount of omega3 can affect how all the rest results, too low and suddenly what worked well becomes a serious problem
Glad to find this scientific based channel! I just subscribed!
Great work, thanks for sharing!
The debate here isn't whether too much Cholesterol will kill ya. Too much anything will do that. Question is how much is too much. And is Cholesterol causing your problems or your problems causing the Cholesterol.
@SolveForX
11 ай бұрын
Consumption of cholesterol is causing the problem. Ingesting fats from animal products is causing the problem.
@Dan-gs3kg
11 ай бұрын
Given that cholesterol it endogenously produced in the body, probably the latter.
@dr.proteomix1257
11 ай бұрын
@@SolveForXphysionic, Attia, and every other well educated individual in the lipid community have come to the conclusion that dietary cholesterol does not increase risk because in most cases it will not increase serum cholesterol. Saturated fat is a different story though, but it’s important to differentiate these.
@Michael-vc2cs
11 ай бұрын
@@SolveForX How is it that so many of us, including myself, eat tons of animal fat and have perfect blood numbers. Also, I don't exercise a lot either.
@markaguilera493
11 ай бұрын
@@Dan-gs3kgThat still doesn't mean there's no limit to the quantities of cholesterol and sat fat we should ingest, Nic made that point.
I believe the issue here is not the idea of elevated LDL, but more of the definition of elevated. It seems that as the years go by, the smaller the number that is considered "normal LDL"...
@Unsensitive
11 ай бұрын
If you consider the factors that make LDL "go bad" then look at the population being used to create the data, it makes sense they push for a lower level. Essentially LDL follows some form of J or U curve, as do most things. Where your optimal LDL level lies depends on if it's at risk of glycation or oxodation. So Saladino's optimal LDL for minimizing risk is likely much higher than an obese diabetic who eats a bunch of processed food. Well.. most people are metabolically unhealthy, with a diet high in vegetable oils which oxidize easily. This means their optimal LDL for minimal risk is lowered. This easily explains the data and studies we see, and doesn't disagree as much with Saladino either, though I think his perspective is still a bit too simplified.😮
@flipino007a
11 ай бұрын
@@Unsensitive your point makes complete and total sense. Recently, it's made more and more sense for me to then to view the data as part of a system and not as "the" deciding factor of health and longevity. My cardiologist insists on the absolute lowest LDL, even claiming he wants to see it below 40, despite my total cholesterol being 129.
@stellasternchen
11 ай бұрын
@@Unsensitiveegetable oils are cardioprotective. Various studies show that.😂😂😂. In that way breathing would be unhealthy because you are creating superoxide with every breath you take. Oh, and be careful when eating meat too, because it causes immense oxidative stress during digestion.
@Unsensitive
11 ай бұрын
@@stellasternchen I don't disagree that many studies came to that conclusion, but they are biased and incorrect in their understanding of physiology and nutrition. Many are too short to show the harms, which need to be 5+ years in most cases, as these are a long term toxin which are incorporated into your cell membranes. My anecdotal n=1 Eliminated them from my diet and my arthritis disappeared. Chronic pain is gone. My allergies are virtually non existent. My sun tolerance increased 3-5x and I barely sunburn unprotected if at all. And lastly, my lifelong asthma, which I had for over 40 years, and was on 2-3 medications plus occasional steroids and antibiotics due to lingering respiratory infections, disappeared. I no longer need any medications. if you still believe vegetable/seed oils are cardio protective, there's no point in me arguing with you, but you're as ignorant as the diabetes physicians still telling their patients to eat healthy carbs and pump themselves with insulin.
@The_Average_YouTube_Enjoyer
10 ай бұрын
@@stellasternchen Ah yes, Studies shows it's OK so I follow it and accept it like gospel. Are you a journalist? Lmao.
thanks for your analysis and informative content
It really is worth mentioning at this point that interventions to lower cholesterol have an extremely low effect on absolute risk reduction, in the region of 1.5 - 3%. The only rational I can think of for the use of statins is that at a population level , a 3% decrease in mortality is potentially a lot of people saved. On the individual level , the benefits start to look dubious Vs the potential short and long term side effects.
@MarmaladeINFP
10 ай бұрын
If you wanted to be rational in your analysis. But rationality wouldn't make statins very profitable.
@goliathonscave9834
8 ай бұрын
However, anything less than 5% absolute risk is clinically insignificant and essentially due to chance. So there is no significant evidence that lowering cholesterol is any better than chance.
@TheExcellentVideoChannel
8 ай бұрын
An important point to this is it means that if lowering cholesterol has virtually zero effect on mortality then cholesterol is not a cause. It's a side effect that just correlates with a yet unknown cause .
@flcps
7 ай бұрын
@@TheExcellentVideoChannelso we have a good remedy that does nothing... Let's sell it
@TheExcellentVideoChannel
7 ай бұрын
@@flcpstechnically if the high cholesterol is created by body to fix damaged cells then statins aren't doing nothing, they're stopping the body repair itself aka f'ing people up.
Dave Feldman did some experiments years back showing how LDL strongly varied with fat intake. What that told us was that LDL isn't a good indicator of much more than fat intake a few days earlier. Using his results as a guide, you can practically get any result you want at some specific day. I'm in the camp that thinks avoiding diabetes is much more important than LDL values. And that there are more effective ways of avoiding CVD than trying to change the LDL.
@megavegan5791
11 ай бұрын
CVD is caused by a lifelong exposure to elevated LDL/ApoB. Day-to-day LDL readings are meaningless, just like Feldman's 'research'.
@simonround2439
11 ай бұрын
What would you need to do to manufacture a lower LDL score?
@starxcrossed
11 ай бұрын
I remember dave Feldman was avidly checking his blood cholesterol for a long while, trying different things. I have actually tried this approach, as I usually have very high cholesterol when I get bloodwork. Once I tried eating a whole pound of 97% lean ground beef, broccoli, and oats the day before. I only fasted the 12 hour minimum and my cholesterol dropped like 120 points in contrast to when I was doing high fat keto the day before with lots of fasting 16+ hours. But also, I do believe high LDL is bad and you should be eating fiber and vegetables. I no longer do keto or any kind of fasting.
@svenmorgenstern9506
11 ай бұрын
I tend to concur with diet having notable effects on LDL-C values. My most recent labs from about 6 months ago had a (calculated) LDL-C of 115. MD had a fit, since my previous labs from 9 months back had me at LDL-C of 85. So...about 72 hours prior to labs I'll be eating as high a fat diet as I can stand (usually avocados & tuna packed in olive oil) then a single meal with enough carbs to get my blood glucose right where I want it. Doing that I usually get LDL-C in the 75-85 range. My typical diet these days is fairly low carb (50-75 grams of digestible carbs/day) primarily to keep my blood glucose & a1C values at normoglycemic levels.
@russvet
11 ай бұрын
Yes!
Another issue is that LDL is a calculated value. There are at least 2 types (5?) which can only be determined by direct test, and not all types cause problems. In my opinion, the calculated value should be considered a screening test only, followed up with a confirmatory direct test. And, of course, training for the doctor. (Yeah, its amazing how many doctors lack training, except perhaps on the golf course.)
@derpy_blue
11 ай бұрын
that's so true, plus how many different factors may come into play when assessing if an individual with elevated LDL is actually at a health risk when it comes to doctors, I think it's high time schooling system had finally changed, switching to a more holistic approach - not only teaching how to solve problems with pharmacology but also through lifestyle/diet/environment
@LTJBLTJB
11 ай бұрын
Yes there's pattern A which is usually called large and/or fluffy and it's made (as far as what I've read is true) directly by the liver and pattern B which is small and dense and comes from VLDL particles after they've emptied their triglycerides. Some say that pattern A is harmless and others that it's less harmful than pattern B which they all agree that it's more harmful. More pattern B most of the time means bigger lipoprotein number that's why the paradigm shifted to LDL-p or ApoB measurement. There's also LPa which is way more atherogenic than pattern B and people with FH usually have elevated. Another caveat is that while LDL lipoproteins are supposed to get trapped under the endothelium because "they are bigger than the HDL lipoproteins" it's the smaller ones that are more harmful rather than the pattern A particles. And HDL lipoproteins, the ApoA ones, are found to be either protective or completely harmless, depending on who you ask, despite being way smaller than the ApoB lipoproteins. Peter Attia has stated that it's the ApoBs that are atherogenic while the ApoAs are not. Overall there's big ambiguity on that matter with experts like Robert Lustig and Ben Bickman looking at lipids as a secondary measurement with the primary ones being blood glucose and insulin levels (an idea that I personally lean towards most) and others like Peter Attia and Thomas Dayspring who treat lipids as a primary factor for vascular disease.
@lollsazz
11 ай бұрын
@@LTJBLTJBInteresting information! Yes, things are more complicated than just "high or low" LDL, and insulin sensitivity should definitely be counted in IMO, as the damage to the endothelial lining of the vasculatory system is amplified pretty quite a lot by the effects of high glucose levels
@LTJBLTJB
11 ай бұрын
@@lollsazz And another important factor is that, glucose aside, high levels of insulin are a big risk factor in their own. Kidney disease, hypertension, increased risk for cancer etc, all caused by hyperinsulinemia.
@megavegan5791
11 ай бұрын
All atherogenic lipoproteins have ApoB and they’re all small enough to get into the arterial walls. Don’t go chasing waterfalls.
another great video - thank you!
really liked this video, you are the best science based channel ever!
@Physionic
11 ай бұрын
I don't think I'd go that far - there are several great creators in the field, but thank you for the support! :)
@krashanb5767
11 ай бұрын
@@Physioniclike who?
@itaysports
11 ай бұрын
@@krashanb5767 joining to this question! @Physionic
What I was taught at uni was exactly in the middle of those two points of view. LDL is not what causes any problems to anyone - the problem begins when LDL binds with a sugar molecule. Such a product can no longer be a part of the lipid delivery cycle and ends up dumped on the artery walls, causing all the trouble. You can fight that issue in two ways: lower your LDL, or lower your blood glucose levels. So... the main problem I see is all the blame gets excessively put on a single culprit - although it takes two to tango. From this perspective, you can get away with higher LDL on a keto diet, or you can eat a whole cake if you have low LDL. I would not go for such extremes, though.
@archascents5157
7 ай бұрын
are you talking about glycation? do studies back your argument?
@jankadlcek608
7 ай бұрын
@@archascents5157 You mean the difference between LDL and oxidated/glycated LDL for atherosclerosis? That is no secret or guesswork, really. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18607185/ But the part about "lower your sugar, you will lower the glycation" might not be studied yet at all. I do not know, but who would put any money to such a study?
@jeffjensen2083
6 ай бұрын
Glucose attaches to red blood cells when the diet is highly restricted of carbohydrates the red blood cells live longer because there is less insulin in the blood. So A1C can appear higher because the blood cell looks like a sugar ball after a while. But the health improvement in the body is very evident. That is just on example. Not sure if any glycation occurs on LDL. You might want to look up Dr. David Diamond PhD he did a good video with Dr. Shawn Baker. On KZread as well.
@archascents5157
6 ай бұрын
@@jeffjensen2083 "Glucose attaches to red blood cells" that sounds like glycation
@jeffjensen2083
6 ай бұрын
@@archascents5157 Yes that is Glycation it happens to much of the body I believe but I’m not sure if LDL get Glycation it is how the body carries Lipids around in the body while glucose flows in the blood stream. My other point is glucose is essentially treated like at behaves like a poison that the body needs to get rid of as quickly as possible.
I have heard that sugar in the bloodstream can scratch up the walls of the arteries and that scratched surface provides the means by which ldl (sdldl) will adhere to the artery walls. Additionally, calcium at some point becomes encased in the sdldl particles, so there is the hardening ( calcofication) process. Would you care to address this postulation, as well as D3, K2, calcium supplementation, slsl, and elevated triglycerides ?
@VeganLinked
10 ай бұрын
If you're worried about like glycation then don't eat animals because their fat causes intramyocellular lipids to develop into insulin resistance preventing glucose from entering the cells. Kind of like this video says she much or too little of a good thing can be bad. Glucose is great from Whole plant Foods because fiber helps it enter the bloodstream slower. And whole plant Foods don't cause the insulin resistance.
@MarmaladeINFP
10 ай бұрын
It's amusing to see a vegan arguing against animal foods in terms of glycation. Without plant foods, glycation of animal foods would be minimal.
@VeganLinked
10 ай бұрын
@@MarmaladeINFP "Advanced glycation end products (AGEs) are formed when fat- and protein-rich foods are exposed to high temperatures. Some foods that are high in AGEs include: Meat, especially red meat, Certain cheeses, Fried eggs, Butter, Cream cheese, Margarine, Mayonnaise, Oils, Nuts. Fried foods and highly processed foods also contain high levels of AGEs. Grilling meat can also cause the formation of AGEs. Meats high in protein and fat are likely to form AGEs during cooking. Carbohydrate-rich foods such as fruits, vegetables, and whole grains maintain low AGE levels after cooking."
Since my cancer diagnosis 2 years ago, I developed what my husband considers an obsession with becoming healthy. I read - no, study- everything I can and make use of it in my personal life to that end. Granted, I am a test subject of 1. But here’s what happened to me. In September 2021, I had surgery for breast cancer followed by radiation therapy. I am 5’3.5” tall and weighed 160 lbs., had insulin resistance with morning fasting BG levels around 102. Blood lipids were in the normal range, though Total cholesterol was a bit over 200. However, there were questions regarding the health of my liver based those lab results. Fast forward to September 2022. Went for my annual check-up. Cancer hasn’t returned but blood work hasn’t improved, but hasn’t gotten worse either. My weight is now 165, I feel sluggish, and don’t sleep well. My cancer doc is concerned about my BP and fasting glucose. Forgot to mention that my BP was around 143/78. Typical HR was 76-78. My GP insisted I start statins. I complied, though the only lipid out of line was total cholesterol. In November, cholesterol was low enough to be considered normal but I felt even worse. Brain fog, muscle cramps. It was almost as bad as Covid. I was disgusted and determined to do everything I needed to do to get healthy. I started intermittent fasting, got rid of all sugar in my diet, had no more than 1 alcoholic drink per month (at celebrations) then started following a mostly keto diet. Again fast forward 6.5 months. My weight is now 132. A DXA scan shows visceral fat at 1.8 which is ideal. My RER is 0.71, also great. In addition, I had in-depth labs done - CardioIQ Advanced Lipid Panel and Insulin Resistance Panel with Score. Insulin resistance was gone - Ref Range is Insulin sensitive
@C_R_O_M________
11 ай бұрын
Great! I just left a comment about Dr. Gundry, a surgeon and cardiologist with vast experience (more than 10000 surgeries) who says that he couldn't care less about LDL. He proposes monitoring triglycerides and HDL and how the two relate to each other. Look him up. One like him worth more than 10000 papers "proving" anything.
@saxologist1
11 ай бұрын
@@RandomGuy-qg9xf lol....random thought from the random guy. look into a mirror random but don't blame the mirror for your ignorance
@evankalis
11 ай бұрын
Weight loss can increase ldl because it is a lipid carrier and keto can increase ldl because you would use fats for energy more. Congrats on the lifestyle bump up!
@cook5436
11 ай бұрын
But the Physionic guy read TONS of HUNDREDS of papers!
@FrenchRoseGoddess
11 ай бұрын
My experience exactly! In fact my experience and decision making exactly parallels all that you have written Veronica. The only slight difference is the timeline with my BCA Stage IIB diagnosed Aug 2022. My husband is a surgeon and insisted I stop the Ketogenic diet because my Total cholesterol and LDLs went up when I started the ketogenic diet. Yet my Triglycerides and HDL were still normal. I refused to stop my lifestyle and dietary changes so he insisted I see my Cardiologist. The cardiologist asked if I was considering Statins and I told him that although my husband took them (had 95% blockages in 2 arteries and stents subsequently placed) there was NO way I would take Statins because of all their associated risks. He said so Statins are off the table for you. I replied YES! So he suggested a Calcium Score to see what that showed. Results were ZERO score for all cardiac arteries. He was stunned as I am 69 yo. He said my cardiovascular system was “like a 30 yo!) So at 5ft 3.5in (161cms) and 115lbs(52.2kgs) doing 6kms power walking a day, alternate days, weights for strength training, no alcohol since Aug 2022 and a strict ketogenic diet I will continue this regimen as it seems to be the way to best manage my future health post Stage II BCA! I will not be worried about a higher Total Cholesterol or higher LDL when there are many more significant factors I need to manage to reduce my risk of cancer recurrence when exercise and diet are such unequivocal factors in reducing risk for recurrence. (For evidence see, Dr Eric Westman, Obesity Specialist, Duke Uni; Dr Christy Kettlering, Radiation Oncologist, NorthWestern; Dr Robert Lustig, Paediatric Endocrinolgist, Prof Uni California; Dr Jason Fung, Nephrologist, Uni Calf and Uni Toronto; Dr Daniel Lieberman, Paleo-anthropologist Prof Harvard; and on and on…)
Thanks for this.
I'd like to see a one on one with you and Paul Saladino. I think it would answer a lot of questions.
@RickinICT
3 ай бұрын
I imagine Saladino would insist on hosting. I don’t think Physionic’s filter game is up to Saladino’s standards. Dude looks like an airbrushed cartoon character in that video. 🤭
I just passed my entrance celular bio exam and I’m in awe with your content, (I’m a med student) and I aspire to one day do research of my own, thank you for the amazing content!!
@thepimptastic2
7 ай бұрын
Make sure you do a better job then. This guy has been wrong about way too much.
@bottlecap6334
7 ай бұрын
@@thepimptastic2Hey! we are all humans. we are Imperfect.
@sjcsscjios4112
4 ай бұрын
What has he been wrong about
@wendys9500
Ай бұрын
@@thepimptastic2Can you name something and give your own evidence
Thanks for the analysis. Although I'm not technical in this area, I follow and appreciate your input. I recall hearing something about Triglycerides also being a factor, one possibly to be concerned about over LDL, as well. I don't recall where I heard that. Anyway, thanks for the information.
Love your enthusiasm @5:00 and you're right it is super cool!
Thanks for your analysis (and the bit with the chairs ... 🙂). With regards to LDL, an you comment on the phenomena related to lean mass hyper-responders? What is the relationship between exercise (in terms of both intensity and volume/ammount of exercise) and LDL? Have you looked at any studies that look at hyper-responders?
@geoffreylevens9045
11 ай бұрын
There's almost no finished studies on LMHR. There's one (led by Dave Feldman) that is in the process of having data correlated and analyzed. But nothing published. Everyone wants to extrapolate from published studies on LDL-C but LMHR folks are so far outside "normal" range that those studies may not apply. We wait, hope, and do what we do...
A question I have pertaining to LDL's is concerning the different density species of LDL's. There are different sizes of LDL's and the danger risk is associated ONLY with the lowest density species. But a standard HDL and LDL panel doesn't differentiate between those sub species. I have read that the Larger of the LDL's can make up as much as 80 of the LDL's and they are not a risk factor for CHD. So the statement that a high LDL reading (overall) isn't making that distinction. So the question I have is this: At what percentage of the total LDL reading that is from the Lowest LDL species represents a higher risk for CHD?
@tomgoff7887
4 ай бұрын
This is not correct. All LDL particles are atherogenic. irrespective of size. I understand that the total number of LDL particles provides a better risk estimate.
I'd be interested to know what you think about his recent discussion with Dr Alo, a cardiologist. Dr Saladino makes some great points as they discuss the subject in detail.
great analysis
I guess what i tried to say with the previous post is that people with a high LDL often have this from eating a shty diet, and therefor will suffer from CVD more than people with a low LDL who will eat a overal healthier diet. If you get your high LDL from a healthy diet you might not get sick from it at all.
it seems to me as if he has many hypotheses, however I feel that he tried to skip the scientific process for the excitement of a new discovery. another great video!
Great video 🎉
Being a non academic person, my simple understanding is diabetes results in obesity due to diet (sugar and processed carbs) , obesity causes inflammation, oxidation from say seed oils cause damaged LDL which combined with inflammation cause plaque which grows and causes blockages.
I love your videos. You are the "Data'” of the medical video world! Funny and factual. Keep making the fact checking videos!
@Physionic
11 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@FOTBC
11 ай бұрын
Well, thank you. One of the things that is glaringly absent from much of the health advice and opinions on social media is the scientific aspect of these things. I don’t mind that people are attempting to make these things easy to understand, but the problem is, if you do not properly interpret the factual data, all you have done is make ignorance easy to accept. That’s not what we need. I don’t really care about the personalities of individuals. Because someone sounds right, or because they are popular and have the right image doesn’t really matter if the information that is being given is inaccurate. We’re not dealing with just one person’s opinion as opposed to another. If we follow the wrong advice, it could be extremely harmful to us physically mentally, etc. So we need to be very careful and very detailed as possible and wise in our evaluation of any and all kinds of information that we are receiving regarding health over social media. That’s why I like what you’re doing and I really hope you continue to keep up the great work..
@VeganLinked
10 ай бұрын
No doubt, he's nailing it!
@johnmartinsen963
8 ай бұрын
@@VeganLinked 🤣🤡🤏
An important consideration is any fasting diet also raises LDL. Why? The LDL is an energy transportation molecule. Once you need to transport FATS to energy rather than glucose LDL will elevate to transport this secondary energy system. My doctor was shocked when my yearly check showed a complete change and LDL was elevated. I had lost weight blood glucose down. Triglycerides down. He still wanted to prescribe Statins! I told him as he didn’t have time to do research on new studies in his field I would. Still not taking statins. 😂
@C_R_O_M________
11 ай бұрын
Good for you. A crutch isn't doing your body any favors.
@Dan-gs3kg
11 ай бұрын
@@C_R_O_M________ it's not a crutch, it's the main energy source for endurance athletes, and sports athletes.
@defeqel6537
11 ай бұрын
Any inflammation, including exercise, also increases LDL, which is what you want. Problem seems to be mostly damaged LDL.
@C_R_O_M________
11 ай бұрын
@@Dan-gs3kg I was obviously referring to statins.
@tomgoff7887
4 ай бұрын
It's wonderful how you know so much more about this subject than the global scientific and medical communities.
I'm 75 years old and I have high LDL (139). I worked for 52 years and had one sick day back in 1969. Maybe there is something good about having high LDL. I am also Apoe2.
Great content - thanks Nic :) Would you please also do a piece on statins - are they good or bad for you?
Thank you for the very well explained VDO. One question though: What LDL-level range would typically be the sweet spot from an overall health perspective?
@dsmj7389
11 ай бұрын
My lab printouts always give the normal LDL range as 66-100
@peterbernhard6087
Ай бұрын
@@dsmj7389 If you eat Carnivore or Animal Based like Paul Saladino those Numbers are much higher. But then again other numbers are also out of Range. Triglycerides for example are normally lower. So as far sa i know these Numbers are depending on the diet yo take. So this 66-100 represnts the range for a "normal" or "standard american" diet. I for my part don't think that anyone sees through all the complex mechanisms in our Body. Meaning.. i don't believe that eating meat or eggs is a risk factor. Those are whole, unprocesed and very bioavailable foods. Why fear such things...?
@Noegzit
21 күн бұрын
According to this study published in 2024 the sweet spot is between 100 and 189 mg/dl: "Is LDL cholesterol associated with long-term mortality among primary prevention adults? A retrospective cohort study from a large healthcare system".
@Noegzit
21 күн бұрын
@@dsmj7389 That is too low according to this 2024 study "Is LDL cholesterol associated with long-term mortality among primary prevention adults? A retrospective cohort study from a large healthcare system". Be aware that what is defined as normal is subject to caution and has been modified several times in order to prescribe statins to more people...
One wildcard in this is whether the studies use measured or calculated LDL. Our blood work results use a Friedewald calculation as it saves money over actually measuring it. I have found that having a good (low) Triglyceride/HDL ratio, say below 1 tends to show a significantly higher calculated level than if using the "Iranian" LDL calculator. My Trig/HDL tends to run around 0.8-0.9 ( a measure of good insulin sensitivity) and my Friedewald LDL calculation tends to run 25-30 higher than the Iranian calculation. Any comments on this?
@Physionic
11 ай бұрын
They use measured in the studies. Usually a variety of measuring techniques, including cholesterol esters and/or particle number by NMR, electrophoresis.
@1000BabyRage
8 ай бұрын
They may use measured in studies, but most people getting tested don’t get measured, unless an NMR test is specifically ordered.
@chandebrec5856
7 ай бұрын
@@1000BabyRage True, but at least some labs, e.g., Quest, offer an LDL-C Direct, and I'd guess that most offer an ApoB which I believe is a useful stand-in for particle number.
I think almost all of dieting can be summarized with "Dosage makes the poison".
Nice work
I like your rebuttal of the (hypo)theses of dr. Saladino. Still I wonder if current guidelines are set correctly. Of course water is healthy, but deadly if we drink 30l/day, but also it is better to drink 3l than 2l. What about the cholesterol? How can we be sure that slightly increased levels are not better than "normal" as we know it? How were the tables creatred? Just my 5 cent for a potentially very insightful and interesting new video topic that we would be happy to hear you commenting on!
@jimlofts5433
6 ай бұрын
low ldl has a higher all cause mortality than high LDL - also see new study of LMHR (LDL 350+ )compared to Miami Health study that showed no difference in plaque buildup over 4 years
I heard from The Dr. Gundry Podcast that Polyphenols reduce the stickines effect in LDL, and in theory we might rather look on the levels of polyphenols in our food, rather than worry about LDL. I'm curious what your thoughts would be on this theory?
@MarmaladeINFP
10 ай бұрын
But polyphenols aren't as profitable as statins. There is the problem.
This is very interesting to me, on a personal level. Two years ago I was a fit healthy 59 year old with good dietary habits, no overweight, no smoking, very little drinking and no drugs when I had a heart attack completely unexpected. Turns out I have clogged arteries. No one can tell me why. I have zero pre-diabetes, perfect blood sugar levels but higher than average LDL-c. That last one, no one can explain other than 'genetics.' I am now looking into elevated levels of homocysteine as a possible cause, because 'genetics' doesn't really mean anything. I fortunately didn't suffer any damage to my heart and I am fine for now but I did have a stent placed and I probably need more care, although I feel perfectly fine - but I felt fine the night before the heart attack so... Your videos have a real life impact on me and I'm sure others, so thank you for this. 👍
People with high LDL live longer. Lowering cholesterol doesn't prevent heart attack. The body needs cholesterol its good 4 you.
Its the LDL size and LDL particle count that matters.
I ate carnivore for a few years, I ate a high fat keto version I got my cholesterol checked regularly. It stayed low the entire time. Could you go over the "impact' of dietary cholesterol on blood cholesterol?
@johnupjohn
9 ай бұрын
Are you on keto/carnivore now?
@NickM89
9 ай бұрын
Animal based diet with healthy carbs is good too. I think genetics play a role in cholesterol. You probably workout a lot or burn it off with ketones. I have high cholesterol and no plaque. You have to workout or fast seems to be the key.
@olafkunert3714
2 күн бұрын
"Could you go over the "impact' of dietary cholesterol on blood cholesterol?" Strawman. In the video high levels of blood cholesterol were dicussed, the origin was not.
The best thing about these Mendelian randomization trials is you can go both ways and show the relationship or its inverse. They are really beautiful studies.
Total cholesterol - HDL - LDL = VLDL, if this number is
The words, "relative vs absolute" made this video well worth watching and heeding. THANK!!! YOU!!! I've had a great amount of frustration over the last couple years, because of the seemingly well informed, and researched based presenters of information on CAD, were contradicting eachother on this particular point. Thanks again. I'm 67, and have a relatively low calcium score for a man my age, BUT, I have one particular coronary artery that is "50-70% occluded." perhaps 50% isn't what I was hoping for, but it's hell of a lot better than 70% Needless to say I am concerned. With family history of CAD, I want to be sure I'm not misinformed. Thus far, instead of a stent, my cardiologist and I have opted for the higher dosis of the cholesterol meds. So.... There it is. scary reality.
@stephx9759
11 ай бұрын
Study at 9:50 . The people with the relatively high LDL, what do they eat to get that high LDL. If you eat cookies and get high LDL will you be off the same/worse/better than if you eat actual beneficial food like red meat that raises your LDL to that same level? Are we doing the right thing by just looking at LDL without asking other questions?
@danyalraza4388
11 ай бұрын
@@stephx9759 Yes we are. HDL is not relevant because in studies where theyve increased HDL, it has had no net effect
@rosevanderreijden3216
11 ай бұрын
What medications did he or she put you on? I'm curious.
@Dan-gs3kg
11 ай бұрын
@@danyalraza4388 why is it that heart risk calculations use HDL/TG ratios, and not LDL?
@danyalraza4388
11 ай бұрын
@@Dan-gs3kg Where? Anyone still doing that (including labs and sensationalist fad-youtubers in the carnivore/keto space), are using outdated or very selective science. Basically, HDL & TG are symptomatic of some other issues, such as a large waistline and bad diet, but LDL is actually causative for heart disease. You want to see HDL & TG in the good ranges, but they're just markers of good health, not the cause of good health. Does that make sense?
Re the Mendelian randomisation studies. It works the other way also. Those that genetically have high LDL (familial hypercholesterolemia) have greatly increased heart disease levels (can reduce life expectancy 15-30 years if untreated; even more if the homozygous form). Seems like a pretty straightforward demonstration that LDL is causally implicated ...
@Noegzit
5 ай бұрын
Straightforward? Not so sure. For example, people having a genetic disease resulting in more cholesterol could perfectly have other factors which have some health consequences. And let's assume that the culprit is not LDL-C but rather the number of damaged LDL particles. People with FH could be simply more at risk because they have, on average, more damaged particles. Does it mean than somebody with high LDL-C but with a very low number of damaged particles would be at risk?
@llicit1833
5 ай бұрын
@@Noegzit That idea could be plausible if a single mutation was involved. However FH is caused by mutations in multiple different genes so unlikely they would result in the same phenotype
@Noegzit
5 ай бұрын
@@llicit1833 But even if we have different variants a particular group could have a sufficiently more increased risk to make all people with FH look more at risk. There are some FH variants leading to very high plasma cholesterol levels which are not necessarily associated with premature atherosclerosis and mortality. Better read that twice. We also have patients misclassified as having FH. They don't have FH, they have sitosterolaemia with elevated plant sterols and look as if they had FH. And having elevated plant sterols in the blood is not that great. The fact that there are variants of FH not associated with premature atherosclerosis and mortality tells us that things can be a bit more complicated than we thought. My yoga teacher has FH, she's 78, she's not on statins and has never been. And yet she's still alive and, of course, teaching yoga. I know it's just an anecdote but it proves that having high levels of LDL-C during your whole life doesn't necessarily kills you by "clogging" your arteries at 50. For the record I don't think that having more than 500 mg/dl of LDL-C is particularly great for health, I just wanted to pointed out that sometime things are not as "straightforward" as they seem to be or as some people would like they were.
I have a genetically high level of LDL as did 3 earlier generations on my father's side of the family. My grandfather and great grandfather both lived into their 90's and remained physically fit and active their entire lives. My father went from an active life to sedentary at age 65 when he retired and took anything a doctor said as the gospel. They put him on statins and his life became miserable. Constant body aches and IBS, he seldom left his home or travelled far from it. I told him to get off the medication, but he insisted doctors know best. They continuously changed his medication and dosage to no avail, and at age 77 he took his own life. I believe LDL is a good biomarker, but more studies need to focus on particle density and fitness and diet.
Wrestling analogies is the perk I like most in Nickolas' videos. Helps a lot to digest science granite.
Out of an overall population you can have groups with different characteristics. You can prove that the overall population is overall aided by lower cholesterol. But that doesn't mean that it applies all subsets of the population. For instance, those specifically on Keto diet may not have the same disease or malfunction vectors that those not on Keto diet and there characteristics of the LDL are shaped differently. I believe AI's are going to eventually sort out much of these subset issues and we will get much closer to individualized and specific medicine based on the entirety of an individuals lifestyle. There are a large number of tracking apps are gathering daily information from individuals health decisions and I believe ultimately AI's are going access and sift this data for a huge advance in determining correlations and causations.
@C_R_O_M________
11 ай бұрын
It depends on what initial assumptions these AI bots will be initially fed with. The GIGO principle is a very crucial factor in these.
I remember reading study that showed little correlation between LDL and CVD after age 55, and another study that showed an inverse correlation between LDL and all-cause mortality (with a high optimum level). "LDL-C does not cause cardiovascular disease: a comprehensive review of the current literature" "Burgess et al., ‘Power, linkage disequilibrium, pleiotropy, canalization and population stratification have all been recognized as potential flaws in the Mendelian randomization approach’"
@megavegan5791
11 ай бұрын
Reverse causality. Step away from the David Diamond nonsense.
@profd65
11 ай бұрын
And that impressed you? First of all, if you suffer from certain cancers your cholesterol drops. That doesn't mean low LDL is unhealthy; it means it can be a marker for cancer. Second, some people with high cholesterol dropped dead before age fifty-five. Third, a lot of people who have low cholesterol in the over fifty-five cohort have it because they were diagnosed with cardiovascular disease and are currently taking statins and eating a diet lower in fat than they used to. Once again, the low cholesterol has become a marker of disease (but not a cause of it).
@C_R_O_M________
11 ай бұрын
@@profd65 There's a Dr. Gundry, thoracic surgeon and cardiologist, with over 10000 heart operations under his belt who says that he couldn't care less about high LDL. He looks for triglycerides and HDL. He has no (visible) incentives to lie and tons of PRACTICAL experience.That's who I'd trust in this. Not 1000 academic studies of who knows what content within them.
@daisiesushitam984
11 ай бұрын
Thank you for citing the article "LDL-C does not cause ....". I have been looking for this:)
@leoalphaproductions8642
11 ай бұрын
People who use associative data to form a scientific conclusion are in the business of pseudoscience and charlatanism. They need to go back to school and understand what the scientific method entails. Every single LDL study I've ever read has methodological errors and makes bold claims all based on associations. Not to mention the fact that most of them are riddled with statistical errors, that's if they're not statistically insignificant (and most of them are). The guy who makes these videos needs a degree in statistics too. Because he reads mere associative data and takes it all at face value.
So what’s the actionable advice for daily life?
Great video. I appreciate your objectiveness in addressing this issue. Three things: 1. You have researched multiple studies regarding the relationship between elevated LDL & heart disease. Keep in mind that the studies funded by Big Pharma could be biased. 2. There are studies that also show an inverse relationship between between elevated LDL & heart disease. The lower the LDL, the greater the association with all cause mortality. Those studies are routinely ignored. 3. People generally develop insulin resistance LONG before diabetes manifests. That may explain why people with Hypercholesterolemia do NOT have diabetes (but they are still insulin resistant). Dr. Paul Saladino never mentioned diabetes, only insulin resistance. Therefore, his hypothesis is still valid. I don’t have a dog in this hunt. Just sifting through the data that is out there.
I would be interested in how the studies bear out the level at which LDL is considered “bad”. Both my parents died in their 90’s and never had LDL below 225 when tested.
@nichtsistkostenlos6565
7 ай бұрын
You know for a fact that both of them NEVER had LDL below 225? You have a comprehensive history of their lipid panels going back their entire life? If so, I'm impressed, but also, literally means nothing. Risk never guarantees outcome.
@nichtsistkostenlos6565
7 ай бұрын
Also, to answer your question, "bad" is always quantified in hazard ratios. Either risk to all-cause mortality or risk to a cardiac event. Based on the trials, they'll calculate what the increased or decreased risk is associated with a certain LDL level.
@maureen-paulbarnes-vonkulm480
7 ай бұрын
My father too.
@michael-qp9xd
7 ай бұрын
Hi - would you know any of their numbers for total and hdl? For me some change over life time - in 20s and 30s total in 130 to 140. Now in 70s is 200 to 220 for total. Maybe change from high hdl amounts around 105 to 115 over past about 10 yrs. In my 20 and 30s doc didnt check my hdl numbers.
@RBR-lo2ei
7 ай бұрын
I'll bet that your 90 year old parents didn't have a clue about their cholesterol levels. Most people I talk to have no idea what their levels are, especially seniors.
The one thing health KZread is lacking is mano a mano debate. People who have guests on their channel always pick people drinking the same Kool-aid. Would love to see an hour debate between you and Paul Saladino, Shawn Baker or.... Peter Attia on areas of disagreement...
Great video, thank you! Insulin resistance and diabetes are precursors to stroke and heart attack. Unfortunately, most docs do not know how to correctly diagnose metabolic issues, which means many people will have an event before they are correctly diagnosed.
Hope to see you talk to him soon
Interesting. Most don’t look at cancer rates esp colon and longterm high meat and or animal protein intake. Also studies on effect of IGF1 (certain healthy level -not too high or low) and pesticides/fertilizer etc concentrated/ stored in animal fat.
Man you read a lot! Well, I think Dr. Saladino also reads a lot. Given he is 45 and he looks remarkably healthy despite his elevated Cholesterol levels. I suspect he is stronger maybe than most people 25. I guess we need to define what is elevated, because what is an accepted reference range maybe defined on an otherwise unhealthy population. Reading is one thing, practice is the other. You can read all the books in the world but the question is can you be as healthy as Dr. Saladino when you are 45?
@gerelgerel7349
5 ай бұрын
👍
@mellocello187
3 ай бұрын
A lot of KZreadrs use filters on their cameras which help them look better. Not saying Dr. Saladino does, saying he may. His face looks kind of “plastic” so I believe “filter”. Our presenter here is clearly not using a filter. His face looks real.
Truth in media right here!
Question: what is the reason for exact location of a plaque on endothelial surface of the artery? Why not all over the surface? Why LDL particle has been parked in exact place?
I turned down statin therapy for my high ldl because of this paper: "Statin therapy is not warranted for a person with high LDL-cholesterol on a low-carbohydrate diet" Curr Opin Endocrinol Diabetes Obes. 2022 Oct 1;29(5):497-511. I am on a keto diet, and my hdl and triglycerides are excellent.
@Noegzit
5 ай бұрын
You should read too "Fat and Cholesterol Don't Cause Heart Attacks and Statins are Not The Solution" and "The Cholesterol Myths: Exposing the Fallacy that Saturated Fat and Cholesterol Cause".
@tomgoff7887
4 ай бұрын
These people are long-term statin sceptics. No credible health authority anywhere in the world accepts their claims. The point is that we really don't know what the long term effects of high LDL plus low carb diets, on mortality and morbidity risk, are. Articles in obscure pay-to-publish journals like this should be treated with caution.
@Noegzit
4 ай бұрын
@@tomgoff7887 Science is neither a question of consensus nor decided by a majority vote. You can perfectly be right even if you are alone to think the Earth is not flat. Health authorities are paid by food industry and big pharma. I hope you know that. So don't be too surprise if health authorities generally say what they are told to say, id est what will increase the benefits of the shareholders. They say it is science but it is just politics, money and vested interests. The statin market is worth 15 billions of dollars each year. Fairly enough to make them a little more appealing than they really are by minimizing their side effects and overestimating their supposed health benefits, don't you think?
@redimor
2 ай бұрын
@@tomgoff7887there arent long term statin users either.
@sebastianmalte7894
Ай бұрын
Hope to join you
I love your content and willing to pay for more. Question: Can you do a study on the impact of Zone 2 training
I did not hear VLDL mentioned and how it differs in effect from LDL. Very often VLDL is referred to as simply LDL and this can be very misleading since the two are quite different. Also I did not hear anything about the HDL and the Ratios and those effects on overall health.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't only _oxidized_ LDL (and not standard, healthy molecules of LDL) that actually turns into plaque within arteries' walls? My biggest concern would be with inflammation that helps promote that oxidation.
Your body regulates LDL, everyone is different, the most important thing is lowering inflammation the carnivore diet does that then let you LDL fall where it may. Also lowering stress, getting more sleep, avoid environmental toxins, exercise are all very important too!
I think we should take into consideration that the reference ranges for cholesterol have been constantly lowered by the science community in the last 30 years. I remember when I was doing my faculty education the limit for overall cholesterol was 6, now it is 5. We do have to wonder if this is only due to new emerging studies or something else (and no, I am not a conspiracy theoriest).
@Deep_Divers
10 ай бұрын
True science holds up to any and all questions about the data, the facts, or how the study was conducted, doing so doesn't make you a conspiracy theorist. The problem arises when political interests / corporate greed become entangled with science to the point where people who ask questions are labeled as conspiracy theorists in order to silence them.
@VeganLinked
10 ай бұрын
@@Deep_DiversPaul sells supplements
@flcps
7 ай бұрын
@@VeganLinkedpoor Paul against all medical corporations...
@VeganLinked
7 ай бұрын
no, poor vulnerable people he misleads and poor animals that suffer the most consequences@@flcps
@tomgoff7887
7 ай бұрын
@@Deep_Divers Making wild claims that are constrary to the scientific evidence and then claiming that that evidence has been fabricated by powerful interests to hide the Truth is what defines conspiracy theorists. Not asking questions.
This is fun. Intelligent discourse is fun.
Thanks!
@Physionic
9 ай бұрын
Thank you, Dave - just saw this.
You bring up some valid points regarding FH and early development of atherosclerosis, but I would like to bring your attention to the inverse association outlined here 16:29 . A review of FH patients “Importance of Coagulation Factors as Critical Components of Premature Cardiovascular Disease in Familial Hypercholesterolemia” by David Diamond and colleagues show that most of the risk for early development of atherosclerosis in these patients has to do with abnormal coagulation that is inherited and can be worsened with lifestyle. They demonstrated that patients with FH that did not have these abnormal coagulation patterns lived as long if not longer than patients with normal cholesterol levels. Also the inverse association can be contributed to the patients knowing they have FH and actively changing their lifestyle to ensure they are healthy well into the future.
Could you please name the researchers that you’re reading in your studies in the videos? It helps promote those researchers and in my opinion thanks them in a way.
@noah5291
11 ай бұрын
Great, great point!
@pacmanfl
11 ай бұрын
He just made an 1hr 20min video on LDL last month. Check it out.
@C_R_O_M________
11 ай бұрын
Researchers are not to be revered over practitioners. There's a Dr. Gundry, with more than 10.000 heart surgeries under his belt who's advocating that he couldn't care less about LDL numbers! I'd take his advice over 1000 studies on the issue. The statins industry is a huge one (just to point one possible unethical confounder for those "findings"). The said cardiologist/surgeon has nothing to gain by pointing out the insignificance of high LDL.
It would be interesting if Dr. Saladino chose to respond to this video, which I found extremely compelling by the way. I’m learning a lot from you. I still think it would be interesting to hear Saladino’s rebuttal, however. ❤
@pharmdog1
11 ай бұрын
Saladino would mop him up!
@dharmadreams4586
11 ай бұрын
@@pharmdog1 Seeing the Physionic channel engage directly with other YT creators such as Saladino would make for powerful viewing.
@1crumpet
11 ай бұрын
@@pharmdog1 Yup
@pharmdog1
11 ай бұрын
Who decides what "normal lab value" is?
@davidcolman1766
10 ай бұрын
@@pharmdog1yep, Saladino is probably better with a mop
You bring up some great points. You two should debate. Yes it's a risk factor but I don't see how you explained why it's not causative which is his point.
Quick question but relates to another one of your presentations : For glycine , cysteine supplementation may one use Mg glycinate instead of glycine ? Txs
What about elevated LDL from fasting? Does that increase the risk of heart disease?
@cattleprods911
4 ай бұрын
No
I'm not taking Dr Saladino's side as many of his arguments are specious, but I do think part of the problems with these studies is that LDL is more complex that just LDL. The nature of the LDL profile (and triglycerides and HDL) in toto need to be taken into account. I enjoy this channel because Physionic does go into direct mechanisms and depth and does find multifactor studies to ferret out conclusions that are informed and closer to truth. I have just dipped my toes(watched 3 or 4) into the Physionic waters and I'm impressed by the thoughtfulness he brings to the casts. As a critical thinker I do note that multifactor health analysis is extremely difficult and prone to many inference errors in a multitude of studies. Physionic sifts and distills a lot of information!
@2Truth4Liberty
11 ай бұрын
We should always be caution of ANYONE making ABSOLUTE claims. But, yes, taking all the vaccines WILL DEFINITELY 100% KEEP YOU FROM GETTING COVID19 ;-0)
@szymonbaranowski8184
11 ай бұрын
but we don't get the universal measure of how good studies are available vs the perfect studies proving information we actual want to know. We get what is available not knowing how far from truth we still are in each topic. but we still navigate using this partial knowledge I mean we should navigate keeping in mind there is a degree of unknown that in many cases can be huge unknown that existing studies keep us far from the optimal direction
@stellasternchen
11 ай бұрын
HDL is only partly valid, since both to low and to high lewels are associate with higher risc for CVD. And the cardioprotective effect is called into question, but that it is only a marker and not caual for decreased risk. So it is not that reliable, looking at the ratios including HDL. Triglycerides need to be taken into account as well. I agree. Non-HDL- cholesterol is taking other lipoproteins into account as well, so I think it's a pretty good thing to look at besides LDL-C.
@2Truth4Liberty
11 ай бұрын
@@stellasternchen Most People are just going to be concerned that the bag says "Doritos" on it. :-0)
@dondajulah4168
11 ай бұрын
I would also be interested to see the Mendallion randomization results on high ldl with low apoB. I really don’t think that anyone that speaks with authority on the topic believes that LDL is a valid metric independent of how it correlates to other markers such as apoB. It aggravates me that we still talk about LDL as if it is useful for anything other than tracking well with markers that actually cause CVD.
Could you please tell me what you think about iodine suplementation? In my country they add it to salt and still almost everyone has thyroid issues... Thank you in advance! Jo from Poland
LDL is being referenced without regard for type of LDL. ApoB little particles are dangerous. We need to learn to differentiate the two and recognize risk
Equilibrium is the key. Some foods are addictive and triggering and should either be avoided or limited. I've never been addicted to meat and fat but fruit, crackers or anything with a sweet taste is triggering. I'm not sure why fatty beef is so satisfying and why I can go over 6 hours without any hunger but it does just that.
@szymonbaranowski8184
11 ай бұрын
genetic memory
@jonwelch564
11 ай бұрын
Fatty beef is statisfying because it's fatty and has protein, both satisfy. Where carbohydrates don't, infact carbohydrates make you want to eat more, and are normally found in abundance at the end of summer. The result is you eat lots of carbs just before winter kicks in, you get fatter and survive winter. The problem is we are no longer are hunter gathers, and carbs are everywhere, and now everyone is diabetic!
I really appreciate that about the same time I want to start yelling at a video, you basically make the point I want to. I imagine most of your audience is the same way. Thank you for moderated analysis and sharing with us all.
@Physionic
10 ай бұрын
Haha, I understand the feeling.
@flameone4705
9 ай бұрын
@@Physionic What should I focus on reducing more then? Eggs and shrimp have high cholesterol but low saturated fat(or almost none with shrimp) while coconut oil has high SF but no cholesterol. Should I worry about the cholesterol in foods or only focus on SF content?
@chandebrec5856
7 ай бұрын
@@flameone4705 I am merely a patient, not anywhere near a professional in this field, but I have done a lot of research. (Whew -- what a prelude!) I believe that non-stearic acid SFAs are much more important than cholesterol in the diet. P.S. I wouldn't say that eggs have low saturated fat. One large egg has 1.5g sat. fat and 70 calories; at 9 calories per fat gram, or ~13.5 calories per 1.5g, that means 19% of calories from sat. fat. I'm sure the nutrition facts numbers are rounded, so this is a very approximate estimate.
My ldl has always been high. Im 69. My arteries were scoped 3 years ago and was told my arteries are extremely clean and healthy. My triglycerides are low. I cheat! I have been taking Nattokinase for six years. My insulin is normal and blood glucose is 75-80 fasting and around 110 non-fasting. I walk for 15 minutes and my glucose drops to around 85. My life style is healthy.
@vickyverma6852
7 ай бұрын
Would you attribute your low triglycerides 100% to nattokinase? Or is there something else that you do or take to keep it low?
Actually he got back with some carbs, mostly mangoes and stuff like that. He says there were a few issues developing. He compared his blood tests with Ken Berry and they apparently had similar numbers.... Though saladino now incorporated fruits to his meat diet.
@Physionic
11 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing.
This is excellent! I love your unbiased approach that is based on an analysis of reputable studies. Thanks for the fact checking on potentially harmful claims being made in other other youtube videos
He looks incredible for 46 :) At 58 I have sky high cholesterol but a high end scan showed ZERO coronary artery deposits and low normal blood pressure. I eat no grains or legumes nor seed oils, lots of polyphenols and fibre and am keto for more than ten years. No doubt people with a normal high inflammatory diet would be all clogged up eating so much fat. I had never heard his theory that deposits were formed to soothe damage, rather I believed that deposits were made to cover inflamed regions. I don't consider insulin resistance to have much relevance. there are several new studies out discussed on youtube by a Dr Feldman.
@tootalldan5702
11 ай бұрын
Agreed. I often wonder if the "leaky gut" is similar to the cracks in the artery (inflamed regions as you say) for plaque deposits.
@jeffhutjens
11 ай бұрын
@@tootalldan5702 Mostly leaky gut is caused by inflammatory grains which induce zonulin, which breaks the integrity of your intestinal barrier.
@eggbenedict-gt7mw
11 ай бұрын
@@tootalldan5702guy is not in the heart
@Chawaniii
11 ай бұрын
Sir if you don t eat vegetables, where do you get your fiber? From fruits ?
@jeffhutjens
11 ай бұрын
@@Chawaniii Oh, I do eat vegetables. Mostly broccoli. Just not starchy root vegetables, but I also take inulin, pectin, acacia gum and other things that qualify as fiber. The only fruits I eat are berries, and technically tomatoes are fruits. I eat the berries for the polyphenols in small quantities that are not enough to throw me out of ketosis. Technically, you could eat only white sugar and be in ketosis. You would have to have small amounts that are not enough to elicit insulin, multiple times a day.
In chronic inflammatory conditions, HDL is preferentially broken down into LDL in order to soak up excess reactive oxygen species. Lowering LDL in these individuals without addressing the underlying cause of inflammation would also likely be very unwise.
As the body makes the majority of our cholestrol you'd have to wonder why it does that. I think the problem with the scientific community generally is myopia and not very good at thinking outside the boxes nor challenging dogma or possibly just happy to get a grant studying something for confirmation bias. I also wonder why cholesterol 'sticks' to some parts of the arterial wal .... but not others yet science not interested in answering those questions. Is high blood pressure ever caused by the body making too much blood?
Great video. On the study confirming the LDL as the independent risk factor, was there any risk stratification with inflammatory markers? Or with hypertension?
@biljanagolub6799
11 ай бұрын
😊😊😊😊
@jackbuaer3828
11 ай бұрын
I did a topical google search, but only looked at the first reference:. It looks on point to me. "Treatment with statins reduced deaths from coronary heart disease by 28% in men with very high levels of low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol but no other risk factors or signs of heart disease, a 15 year follow-up study has reported in the journal Circulation." "The authors said that the findings provide the first direct randomised trial evidence to confirm current guidance that patients with LDL above 190 mg/dL should be considered for statin treatment regardless of other risk factors." Long term study backs statins for patients with high LDL and no other risk factors BMJ 2017;358:j4171
@daisiesushitam984
11 ай бұрын
@@jackbuaer3828 Is the "28%" reduction an absolute reduction or a relative reduction?
@jackbuaer3828
11 ай бұрын
@@daisiesushitam984 Relative. Absolute rates were also included below. "Overall, among all subjects initially allocated to pravastatin, CHD death, cardiovascular death, and all-cause mortality were significantly reduced by 22%, 17%, and 12%, respectively (Table 2). Long-term risk of CHD death, cardiovascular death, and all-cause mortality were significantly reduced by 28%, 25%, and 18%, respectively, among those with LDL-C ≥190 mg/dL originally randomly assigned to pravastatin. The absolute reduction in the risk of death at 20 years from CHD, cardiovascular causes, and any cause was at least 2-fold greater among patients with LDL-C ≥190 mg/dL (absolute risk reduction 2.34%, 3.25%, and 5.39%, respectively) in comparison with those with LDL-C
@prettybirdbeenlpeacock6592
11 ай бұрын
@jackbuaer3828 I don't understand how to determine whether a 2.34% absolute risk reduction is overall that significant in days or years of life saved. Any ideas how that is figured out?
Interesting point about LDL and heart attack risk. I'll have to chew on that for a while. Although, I am still staying away from statins given the other risks such as dementia, Parkinson's, muscle aches, fatigue... while I can understand that extremely high LDL could directly harm the endothelial cells as can sickle cells as can a constant barrage of high insulin levels and high blood pressure.... I am still extremely skeptical that reducing LDL's with drugs that have such harmful side effects is the way to go.
@stellasternchen
11 ай бұрын
There are other lipid lowering medications instead of statins. Ezetemib or psk-9 inhibitors for example.
What increases LDL cholesterol the most ? Is it cholesterol intake ? Or saturated fat intake ?
@2snipe1
10 ай бұрын
Appears to be saturated fat intake as per Alan Flanagan when he reviews Ancil Keyes's leading evidence on the Proof with Simon Hill.
Nicely presented video but I do have a question. Is it possible that ASCVD is simply mechanical or at least mostly mechanical in so far that ASCVD occurs on the pressure side of the vessel it seems the particles are pressed through the epithelial wall in the same way positive pressure osmosis filters work?? I know this sounds overly simplistic but it would help explain why ASCVD progresses more quickly when larger amounts of LDLc floating in the blood i.e the more is likely to be pressed through, that is my theory anyway???.
😆 You're awesome man! love your wry humor. That accompanied by your clear explanations and quality in depth research is golden. I love that you get into the biochemistry details without over simplification. I come to your channel for facts and i'm enjoying it very much. Thanks.
@Physionic
11 ай бұрын
Much appreciated!
High LDL is not a problem if you're on a low carb diet. The LDL just floats around in your blood doing the job nature designed it to do. It only becomes a problem if you have elevated blood sugar. The sugar causes lesions, the LDL then gets layed down in a scab to try and heal that lesion. The scab reduces the size of the arterial pathway, eventually a total blockage and heart attack or stroke if the brain is starved of blood.
@megavegan5791
11 ай бұрын
You poor, ignorant being. 😢
@toms8879
11 ай бұрын
why is it high? the body does it for a reason I would think, might there be more inflammation in Paul's body that needs to be fought off.
@redberries8039
11 ай бұрын
this is Dr Malhotra's line - he comes across as very reliable to me amongst all the confusion and vested interests from pharma
@markaguilera493
11 ай бұрын
Could you cite your sources and debate them with Nic?
@markaguilera493
11 ай бұрын
@@toms8879It's high simply because he eats a lot of sat fat.
Even before I play the video I’m already appreciating your Zoolander face on the intro graphic, Nic. 😂
I’m wondering if the question better put forward is, what is high cholesterol, or appropriate cholesterol and what does the body do with the cholesterol it doesn’t need. As I’ve understood the matter, high levels of LDL can be either a matter caused by insulin resistance that breaks down the cycle of regeneration of cholesterol in the liver thus backing up expended cholesterol into the blood stream thus giving us a marker of ill health. There are some on the Carnivore diet however that produce more cholesterol in the liver (exogenous cholesterol seems never to contribute more than 20% to the mix). This cholesterol however is not oxidized in a body free of inflammation. So why would higher elevations of it be considered bad? Are we working with an outmoded concept of what excess is? Great discussion as usual. I’m starting my formal studies on the long path of functional medicine on Thursday the 20th of July. I’m excited. What endless nuance, what a puzzle with infinite pieces. Thanks for this Mr Verhoeven!