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The Cholesterol Myth
Cholesterol. What images come to mind when you see this
word? Is it positive or negative? Is it health, or is it heart
disease?
If what came to mind was negative, as something to avoid,
and heart disease, then the pharmaceutical companies food
industries have been successful in getting you to believe a
fabricated myth!
According to George V. Mann, M.D., professor of Medicine
and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, "Saturated fat and
cholesterol in the diet are not the cause of coronary heart
disease. That myth is the greatest scientific deception of
this century, perhaps of any century."
Russell L. Smith, Ph.D. is the author of the book, The
Cholesterol Conspiracy. Dr. Smith states that "Both the public
and clinical physicians have simultaneously been swamped by an
ever-growing tidal wave of exaggerations, distortions and even
fabrications of the facts."
Here's the truth. Cholesterol is good! It is a necessary
part of every cell in your body and is essential in virtually
all aspects of metabolism. Without it, we would die. That's
not the impression you got from the advertisers, is it!
Cholesterol is necessary for the brain, nervous system,
hormones, digestion, liver function, heart muscle contraction,
calcium metabolism and bone structure and skin. Cholesterol
forms 50 percent of the nervous system and serves as the
conductor of nerve impulses. It is so important that your body
produces four to seven times as much as you ingest and reduces
its production to accommodate cholesterol intake from the food
you eat.
A deficiency of Cholesterol results in obesity, emotional
disturbances, fatigue, impotency, and many more imbalances.
How the Scam Begun
In the early 1900's, experiments were done in which rabbits
were given extremely high amounts of dietary cholesterol.
Their blood cholesterol rose twenty fold and a soft plaque
like disease formed on the coronary arteries. But the
cholesterol levels returned to normal and the plaque
disappeared when the feeding was stopped. This formed the
basis of the theory that cholesterol caused coronary heart
disease in humans.
Here are the flaws. The rabbits were given a synthetic form
of cholesterol that easily oxidized when exposed to air (which
made it toxic). Rabbits also do not metabolize cholesterol as
do humans. Humans and other animals like dogs and rats do not
develop atherosclerosis-like disease as do rabbits when given
dietary cholesterol. And finally, humans do not develop soft
plaque as did the rabbits; humans develop hard plaque which
does not reverse, and it is not caused by dietary cholesterol.
Eggs and Cholesterol
One of the many foods we are warned about is eggs. In one
study, seventy men were divided into three groups which ate
either 3, 7, or 14 eggs a week for five months. They all had
similar cholesterol levels in the beginning. The total
cholesterol, LDL and HDL cholesterol and triglycerides did not
change during the study for any of the groups.
An 88 year old man consumed 20-30 eggs a DAY for more than
15 years, yet maintained normal blood cholesterol levels of
150 to 200.
Cholesterol occurs only in animal foods. Yet the
consumption of animal fat since 1909 actually decreased by 10
percent, whereas vegetable fat increased by over 200 percent.
The increase of heart attacks has paralleled the increased use
of margarine, homogenized milk and processed foods such as
sugar.
According to Judith DeCava, in her book, Cholesterol, Facts
and Fantasies, in one study, almost half of the patients had
total cholesterol levels under 200, which is supposed to be
safe. Yet half of this group had coronary heart disease. Of
the almost 1200 who did have heart disease, one third had
cholesterol levels under 200. Dr. Michael DeBakey, the famous
heart surgeon, reports that 30 percent of patients who have a
coronary bypass have "normal" cholesterol levels."
The Real Culprit
Here's what IS clearly linked to heart disease: sugar.
Judith DeCava, in her excellent book, Cholesterol, Facts and
Fantasies states,
"John Yukin analyzed the refined sugar consumed by men with
atherosclerosis. The men who had heart attacks ate almost
twice as much sugar as those who not having heart attacks. In
fact, in persons with coronary heart disease, the degree of
atherosclerosis was proportional to the amount of refined
sugar consumed." (The Lancet 1964); 2 (7349):6-8.
As further evidence of this is the fact that the
consumption of fat in the Caribbean countries is very low, but
the use of sugar is very high. Cuba has one of the highest
levels of sugar use, and has a higher death rate from heart
attacks in men between ages 55 and 64 than the U.S.!
The Fox Guarding the Hen House
So what's perpetuating this campaign of misinformation?
It's the money from the drug companies who want you to buy
their cholesterol reducing drugs (that have serious side
affects) and from the food industries that benefit from this
scam.
Here are some examples. The American Medical Association's
Executive Vice-President, Dr. James Sammons, promised
physicians in 1988 of their financial rewards by stating, "the
AMA's campaign against cholesterol will bring both old and new
patients to you for necessary testing, counseling and care."
One researcher who later became a director of the National
Institutes of Health bought stock in a pharmaceutical company
just before announcing the results of a study favorable to the
drug's effects. The editor of the AMA's publication,
Circulation, also received stock options on the same drug
company.
Jane Heimlich began doing extensive research on this
cholesterol issue in 1989. In her book, What Your Doctor Won't
Tell You, she concludes,
"There is no question that the cholesterol program…benefits
three powerful groups in our society to the tune of billions
of dollars. These three are the medical profession, the
pharmaceutical industry, and the food companies."
Keywords: cholesterol, health, weight, loss, heart,
disease, drugs, pharmaceuticals, medical About the
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