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Originally Posted by justgettingby
Hi I posted here about two months ago when I first had my physical results. My total Cholsetrol was 254 with a HDl of 60 and a LDL of 180 and a trig level of 69. I made it thru the holidays and increased my exercise and just had my cholestrol rechecked on Monday and the results are now total 248, HDL 59, LDL 176 and trig 67.. The doctor advised me to keep up the exercising and come back and be rechecked in April/May if the numbers are not even lower he wants to start meds... Just curious if this is how long it takes to drop and if I continue to exercise and continue to watch what I eat what numbers should I be looking for... Thank you..
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Justgettingby:
I answered this partly in another post where someone asked about how long it took to notice changes in lipid profiles. Well, I do tend to treat everything I do like its a big experiment, because...I am a scientist after all.
Anyway, your TG is great, which probably means you low carb it or are in pretty decent shape combined with exercise, or maybe its just plain old genetics in your favor there. Your LDL is more than a bit high, and yes it is a risk factor, but the question is, is it truly the worst risk factor? Your ratio of total: HDL still puts you slightly better than the norm, and again thanks to your decently high HDL--keep up the exercise!
Now, if you play with your diet and reduce fat, you will probably see both your LDL and HDL drop. You might be able to offset this by continued exercise (I certainly was able to). It can't hurt to play around with it though. With respect to diet though, some literature points to saturated fat as raising both LDL and HDL-C, polyunsaturated as lowering both, and monounsaturated fats are implicated in lowering LDL and leaving HDL-C alone.
More than likely, if that LDL does not drop, you will be prescribed a statin. I don't have any personal experience with those because my dysfunction comes from TG and low HDL-C. What may work for you is probably going to be different than what worked for me. Perhaps some of those here that have higher than the norm LDL-C values can offer more suggestions.