I agree that certainly any diet should have plenty of fiber in it and not too much saturated fat. Probably not enough fiber is what has caused my parents to have advanced cases of diverticulosis even though they are at that age when almost everyone shows some of it.
It's the cholesterol and fat angle that I have been questioning, primarily since I think that the majority of this stuff is determined by genetics. I guess by the newer standards, my LDL is good but not great and maybe should be closer to about 100.
Oh, I love omelettes because I get them at this great place that specializes in only breakfast thru lunch and then they close early. They make like 12 different ones and they are brilliant. Sometimes I get their French toast which has wheat germ sprinkled on, is much lower in fat and cholesterol, and it is topped with a bunch of natural fruit.
Regarding HDL, I can certainly vouch for the connection between exercise and raised HDL. When I used to be an inactive teenager (and of course, loaded with testosterone), my HDL showed 29. As I exercised more and more per week as the years went by, my HDL has risen and finally is at that 54 number. I cannot say that this isn't because my really high testosterone numbers fell over the last 15 years... but my HDL certainly started rising fast after I began a lot of exercise.
Thanks for the replies.
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