AboutTanya Zilberter, PhD Expertise I am in neurophysiology, nutrition and dieting academic research since 1972 (PhD in Physiology) and on the Internet since 1995. Developed the Banta Diet program based on macronutrient balance using the Wilder's formula (1922). I granted the non-exclusive reprint rights to the current owner of BantaDiet.com under the condition of free online access to the program.
Experience
Authored 4 academic print books and two popular diet print books as well as about a hundred scientific and popular articles
Organizations I recently do my research on neuroprotective effects of foods and diets. The site where this can be read soon is Brain Fuels
Question I'm a 35 year old man in good shape. At my year physicals all my labs and exams look good. I do have borderline high cholesterol. Rather than taking medication I've been trying to reduce this with diet and exercise. My exercise level is hard to increase because I'm already working out most everyday. So I'm focusing more on diet. After 6 month I improved my triglycerides significantly and my good cholesterol went up as well. Unfortunately my bad also went up a tad bit. So now I'm buckling down even more on diet. The past two weeks I've been reading a lot on sterols and how they can help improve your bad cholesterol level along with a good diet. Today I read a article and its saying there are some studies that indicate this is only a short term thing and over times your level will actually increase. I'm wondering if you have any knowledge on this subject and what your thoughts might be. Thanks for your time, Tom
Answer Hello,
The cholesterol dynamics you described is typical for a low fat dieter, is this your case? If yes, than you might want to consider reducing carbohydrate intake while increasing "good" fats intake. You don't specify your workout routine and exercise type optimal for your metabolic profile can be also something that you might want to learn about.