๐Ÿ’”Cholesterol

Cholesterol is not an essential nutrient. It is a type of sterol fat that is at best (as with HDL) unnecessary to get in one's diet, and at worst (as with LDL) exacerbates risks of heart disease and stroke. Your body naturally produces the cholesterol it needs - you do not need to consume cholesterol in your diet.

The USDA recommends keeping dietary cholesterol "as low as possible while consuming a nutritionally adequate diet." The USDA also warns that "high dietary fat, saturated fat, and cholesterol intakes are associated with increased risk for many diseases." Fortunately, you can completely eliminate cholesterol from your diet by eating plant-based: "both plant and animal foods contain sterols, but only animal foods contain cholesterol." https://extension.okstate.edu/fact-sheets/dietary-fat-and-cholesterol.html https://www.nal.usda.gov/human-nutrition-and-food-safety/dri-calculator Increasing your consumption of plant sterols (phytosterols) can reduce the "bad" LDL cholesterol already in your system. Fruits, legumes, vegetables, and grains can all contain beneficial phytosterols. https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/17368-phytosterols-sterols--stanols

Chemistry

Cholesterol is manufactured by the liver and transported on lipoproteins. We categorize these lipoproteins by high-density (HDL or "good") and low-density (LDL or "bad"). The reason for these "good" and "bad" terms is because "higher LDL cholesterol increases your risk of heart disease. Higher HDL cholesterol decreases your risk of heart disease." https://www.cdc.gov/cholesterol/ldl_hdl.htm

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