auburn62
02-03-2004, 03:20 AM
I posted this additional posting under my original post - "New test results - so much for diet"
Didn't know if you would be looking back at it again, and I would like your further opinion on my new post.
Arizona73, I do fit all of the criteria for Syndrome X. I am approximately 89 pounds overweight, have abdominal obesity, high blood pressure, high trigs and low hdl. The only good thing is that my fasting glucose in Dec. was 100 and on Jan. 31 was 98. I ordered the two Syndrome X diet books and have been trying to go by them. Syndrome X, the Silent Killer: The New Heart Disease Risk by Gerald M. Reaven, and Syndrome X: The Complete Nutritional Program to Prevent and Reverse Insulin Resistance by Burton Berkson and Jack Callem. The book written by the doctor that discovered Syndrome X, Gerald Reaven, suggests some of the very foods a low carb diet does not allow. Example: some types of bread, white potatoes, raisin bran cereal. I tried very hard to follow the information in the two books. If I had even stayed the same on my trigs I would not be so upset. But for them to have gone up by 103 points, which is the highest they have ever been, amazes me! My Aunt is taking Pravochol 40 mg a day and Lopid 660 mg a day. She is not overweight, she walks briskly every morning, eats correctly, and with all the medication her trigs are 159. I know there is a hereditary facter in play here, but what to do?
I looked up the drug Lopid, (that my Aunt is taking) and it is only used as a last resort when no other drug or diet has helped and when trigs are more than 1000. Now I am scared that my liver is getting like my Aunt's and the trigs will become uncontrollable. A 103 point jump in trigs, in a month's time, is a lot! I am 62 yrs old.
Thanks,
Susan
Didn't know if you would be looking back at it again, and I would like your further opinion on my new post.
Arizona73, I do fit all of the criteria for Syndrome X. I am approximately 89 pounds overweight, have abdominal obesity, high blood pressure, high trigs and low hdl. The only good thing is that my fasting glucose in Dec. was 100 and on Jan. 31 was 98. I ordered the two Syndrome X diet books and have been trying to go by them. Syndrome X, the Silent Killer: The New Heart Disease Risk by Gerald M. Reaven, and Syndrome X: The Complete Nutritional Program to Prevent and Reverse Insulin Resistance by Burton Berkson and Jack Callem. The book written by the doctor that discovered Syndrome X, Gerald Reaven, suggests some of the very foods a low carb diet does not allow. Example: some types of bread, white potatoes, raisin bran cereal. I tried very hard to follow the information in the two books. If I had even stayed the same on my trigs I would not be so upset. But for them to have gone up by 103 points, which is the highest they have ever been, amazes me! My Aunt is taking Pravochol 40 mg a day and Lopid 660 mg a day. She is not overweight, she walks briskly every morning, eats correctly, and with all the medication her trigs are 159. I know there is a hereditary facter in play here, but what to do?
I looked up the drug Lopid, (that my Aunt is taking) and it is only used as a last resort when no other drug or diet has helped and when trigs are more than 1000. Now I am scared that my liver is getting like my Aunt's and the trigs will become uncontrollable. A 103 point jump in trigs, in a month's time, is a lot! I am 62 yrs old.
Thanks,
Susan

