Don’t Worry About “Bad” Cholesterol, Says Dr. Paul Saladino

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  • Опубликовано: 17 дек 2024

Комментарии • 2,7 тыс.

  • @TheMinimalists
    @TheMinimalists  Год назад +296

    Do you worry about high cholesterol?

    • @enriquepena84
      @enriquepena84 Год назад +53

      I have 60HDL, 280 LDL and 70 TGC and I couldnt be more Happy with my results

    • @100elephants
      @100elephants Год назад +31

      Nope!

    • @sashachamberlin5904
      @sashachamberlin5904 Год назад +44

      Yes. I just had a doctor tell me to lower my consumption of animal fats. I just started carnivore a month ago, and now I'm questioning.

    • @enriquepena84
      @enriquepena84 Год назад +38

      @@sashachamberlin5904 doctors can't differentiate between LDL oxidized and normal LDL

    • @sixxxeight
      @sixxxeight Год назад +41

      I don't worry about mine! That being said, I'm not drinking butter for breakfast either. I feel dramatically better with more healthy animal fats in my diet

  • @unikornkontroller
    @unikornkontroller Год назад +1879

    I've had high "bad" cholesterol for years. My doctor wanted to put me on a statin. I had heard that getting a coronary calcium scan could determine if I had any plaque buildup in my arteries. It was maybe $100 to do but my score came back at zero. There was no reason I needed to be on a statin. That was 6 years ago and last year I had the scan done again. Score was zero.
    The scary thing was my doc knew about these scans and didn't even offer it up as a solution. She just wanted to put me on a statin.

    • @fwebster6226
      @fwebster6226 Год назад +58

      Wow! My doctor wouldn’t put me on statins until I had a ct scan. I’m glad I did as it turns out I did have a plaque build up. Since starting on statins, I no longer have the daily headaches, breathlessness and fainting spells

    • @nicknanas623
      @nicknanas623 Год назад +1

      change your F... doctor sounds more like a drug dealer
      ..

    • @ln5747
      @ln5747 Год назад +22

      ​@@fwebster6226why did you have plaque build up?

    • @icya5844
      @icya5844 Год назад

      @@ln5747breathlessness sounds like a symptom of A-Fib as well, sounds like he's maybe wasnt the healthiest

    • @junegregory3330
      @junegregory3330 Год назад +100

      Exactly my story! My total blood Cholesterol was 240 wanted me to take a statin, I said no because of what I've read and researched. She said fine then I want you to get a Calcium scan. I did, and it was Zero, no calcium (palque) in my arteries. I'm Italian, Italians genetically can have high cholesterol.

  • @ejack4961
    @ejack4961 Год назад +1798

    My mother had high cholesterol her whole life as did her mother. They both died at 96 with no other health conditions….neither took any prescription drugs .

    • @johnakass3913
      @johnakass3913 Год назад +75

      My mom lived till 90 she had high cholesterol

    • @Mhoova82
      @Mhoova82 Год назад +148

      this is good to hear. I’m 41 and I have High Cholesterol and workout daily. Forget Statins

    • @calltherussian
      @calltherussian Год назад +45

      Really? my total cholesterol is 240 and Dr freaked out on me and wants me taking tons of pills and now I am scared, my bad cholesterol is around 160 and good cholesterol is around 155 and trigs are normal.

    • @dwights1464
      @dwights1464 Год назад

      ​@@calltherussianIf you are a man over 40 or a woman over 50, for a couple of hundred dollars, get a coronary artery calcium scan. The results will tell you if you have measurable coronary artery damage that has been calcified and is a reasonable indicator of coronary artery disease. If you are younger than that even if you're on a poor path you probably will not have lived with it long enough to have an accumulation of coronary artery disease to the point of it being calcified. The test has no needles, no prep, and when I had mine I didn't even take my shoes off. The only (minor) downsides are that it's not covered by insurance and you get the amount of radiation about equal to a mammogram. It could put your mind at ease or could motivate you to make some sort of changes.

    • @gsb5012
      @gsb5012 Год назад +45

      My mother ate all the wrong things, had very high cholesterol and died at 56 from a massive stroke 😐

  • @ThomasWht13
    @ThomasWht13 2 месяца назад +1559

    We need more people like this! Just finished reading "The 23 Former Doctor Truths by Lauren Clark and I had to say its so truth revealing. Industry hides so much from society!

    • @lukag3155
      @lukag3155 2 месяца назад +2

      I finished that book 2 weeks ago and I can say that is amazing book. Would also recommend it. She helped me with so many of new health routines and it was actually interesting to read what she revealed about Industry and how they manipulate society.

    • @kathynassa9974
      @kathynassa9974 2 месяца назад +1

      I went online to purchase this book and it says out of print and not available. Wow what a surprise!!

    • @KC-dg9pu
      @KC-dg9pu Месяц назад +3

      Hiding things = higher profits

    • @suzannfeldschau8946
      @suzannfeldschau8946 Месяц назад +1

      Where can I buy this book?

    • @Apparelheadz
      @Apparelheadz Месяц назад

      Going to order this book, thank you 😊

  • @three60wealth48
    @three60wealth48 8 месяцев назад +260

    My daughter (15) was told she has high cholesterol and because I wouldn’t put her on a statin our Dr fired us as patients. She is not diabetic. We are in Canada.

    • @DavidPeterR
      @DavidPeterR 8 месяцев назад +29

      I've had super high LDL since 15, I refused Statin, and I'm doing well. I just had to change my diet.

    • @pepper419
      @pepper419 8 месяцев назад

      You should have fired the doctor. He/she is probably a vegan.

    • @SusanaXpeace2u
      @SusanaXpeace2u 7 месяцев назад +12

      Wow, did they send her for any tests before firing you as patients?!

    • @bobmeyers3478
      @bobmeyers3478 6 месяцев назад +48

      Don’t want that doctor he did you a favor

    • @hazelfranks2689
      @hazelfranks2689 6 месяцев назад

      disgusting doctor! No intelligence to thik outside the box!

  • @debrakilgore4021
    @debrakilgore4021 10 месяцев назад +452

    My cholesterol numbers have been high for the past 30 yrs. I’m currently 67 😮yrs. IN 2023 I had an stress test, echo, ultrasound, and a cardiac calcium score (CT) of my heart done. No calcium buildup in my arteries. My calcium score was 0. Yet my doctor wants me on statins. If what I’ve been doing for the last 30 yrs has not caused any plaque buildup and I get another 30 yrs I’ll take my chances! 🤷🏽‍♀️

    • @TahitianTreatt
      @TahitianTreatt 8 месяцев назад +1

      this is the same reply someone made almost a year ago. either youre a bot or youre a weirdo copying and pasting comments, because youre lonely and think YT likes ='s friends...

    • @bwnco
      @bwnco 8 месяцев назад +8

      Im 67..my doc wanted put me on them also😅😅😅..ummmm no

    • @rubenjudas238
      @rubenjudas238 7 месяцев назад +4

      Thanks for your comments, as I just got my teat results back and the doctor said it's bloody high, after reading your posts I think I'm ok as I am, thanks again 👍

    • @margiemudge6607
      @margiemudge6607 7 месяцев назад +17

      I to went through the exact same thing. I am 68 and very healthy. I refuse to take statins. The side effects are not worth it.

    • @mishar8889
      @mishar8889 7 месяцев назад +7

      I wonder what people mean when they say "high numbers" of cholesterol? And what number should make people get worried.

  • @msclecarcrzy
    @msclecarcrzy Год назад +771

    My grandma was told in the 90's she had high cholesterol and needed to put on a statin. She said no and she's still here. She's now 91 soon to be 92

    • @jm_1214
      @jm_1214 Год назад +61

      The doctor that puts a 90 year old on a statin should lose their license

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass Год назад +17

      Well, I hope she makes it another 8+ years. Godspeed.

    • @abrahamespejo5278
      @abrahamespejo5278 11 месяцев назад +16

      The doctor who advised her will die from A heart attack 😂

    • @lucidlocomotive2014
      @lucidlocomotive2014 11 месяцев назад +23

      @@jm_1214if she’s 90 now then she was 60 in the 90s

    • @jm_1214
      @jm_1214 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@lucidlocomotive2014 seems logical

  • @karylmorgan7320
    @karylmorgan7320 Год назад +377

    I don't worry about it. Mine has been 235 to 240 for 40 years since I was 37 and back then 235 was considered normal. Pharma kept lowering the numbers every 10 years. I think pharma just keeps lowering the safe numbers to put more people on stations. Scare tactics were used by a cardiologist on me so I dumped him.

    • @sylviajerjerian
      @sylviajerjerian Год назад +16

      I believe you. I had all sorts of tests to find out why my BP was so high. There is nothing wrong with my heart or my kidneys. After so many trials and errors from my doctor, I went on keto. Guess what? My BP is down to 110/70.😊

    • @directajith
      @directajith Год назад +3

      i have high triglycerides. when I reduce it through excercise, ldl sky rockets. can you please give an explanation? my ldl is 208, triglycerides is 276. previous it was 160 and 321 respectively.

    • @MOBU76
      @MOBU76 Год назад +14

      @@directajithcut off sugar and carbs

    • @yrot30
      @yrot30 Год назад +10

      Kind of like Total Testosterone ranges are getting lower and lower. We're getting sicker and sicker (fatter). Healthy TT numbers were higher back then.

    • @vothaison
      @vothaison Год назад +19

      They also take your blood early in the morning AND insist you don't eat anything before that. And we all know, when you're in fasting, your cholesterol could get quite higher than normal.

  • @isabel313258
    @isabel313258 11 месяцев назад +155

    I’m a fit 58 year old and was given a statin . Took it for a year and did my research . I’ve now stopped the statin as I have no other health heart risks and regularly exercise and am not overweight. More risks taking this drug than not in my case

    • @TraciDoering-hw8hu
      @TraciDoering-hw8hu 8 месяцев назад

      Serrapeptase, Prescribed in Europe over 500,000×2 avoid and as an alternative for triple bypass surgery. It will clean the arteries with no risks. Take it on an empty stomach away from medication. Do a course of six. 120,000 I.u. Caps x2 day for three months. Repeat every 5 years. It’s also a potent anti-inflammatory Ivel Endt to steroids, but not steroidal. Do not mix with medicine, especially blood thinners or anti-rejection drugs. Sarah Pepes dissolves scar tissue, and will eat up or dissolve any nonliving tissue in the body. This includes calcium from your arteries. It dissolves the calcium. There is no chance of the calcium, breaking away and blocking an artery, causing a stroke., like there is with surgery it’s an an amazing substance, for which nothing else compares.

    • @americafirst9144
      @americafirst9144 7 месяцев назад +3

      Always look up medicines on a place like Drugs period cmm to see if it is okay to suddenly stop taking something. Sometimes it can be dangerous.

    • @pete23234
      @pete23234 4 месяца назад

      @@americafirst9144 Most doctors take statins. That tells me they are fine. Mine gave me great numbers. Also Harvard studies have shown those on statins have a 40% less chance of heart attack. I have had no side effects either...People just love to complain. It's funny because most americans will take all types of drugs from pills to alcohol but they cry like babies about statins lol

    • @michellemilner5441
      @michellemilner5441 4 месяца назад +3

      I love your statements here: "no other health heart risks" "regularly exercise" "not overweight"... Those statements are part of your overall picture which helps your doc determine if s/he recommends Rx. Primary care is not the evil presented on this thread; we are overworked and loaded with unrealistic expectations (it would take us 3-4 hours per patient to accomplish all the "recommendations" put out by all the professional organizations) which cause some of us to treat our patients as if they are all cut from the same cloth. Having practiced in the military, where we have more time with our patients (often), we have the ability to discuss these things. I'm sorry so many people have had bad experiences with providers who don't research the patient. I'm grateful there are patients on here who are doing their research and coming to the exam room with questions!! Thank you for posting this!

    • @LeslieDelgado-l4v
      @LeslieDelgado-l4v 3 месяца назад

      I'm 54 and my LDL is 162, HDL is 78. I asked about a statin and my endocrinologist said no, not needed because I do not suffer from any other ailments such as diabetes, or being overweight. He actually said I was underweight. After menopause, I gained 15 pounds in a matter of weeks, so i spoke to a nutritionist and she put me on a blood type O meal plan which consists of protein, no sugar, and veggies. I been on this meal plan and dropped the 15 pounds in 2 months. I'm over all happy with my results, but that high cholesterol in my blood results always stumps me. I hate feeling unsure.

  • @JA-zh5xi
    @JA-zh5xi 3 месяца назад +58

    My grandmother had overall cholesterol over 600 and the doctor freaked out and tried to put her on meds. She was already 80 at the time and was like no way. She lived to 90.

  • @glenyst5216
    @glenyst5216 9 месяцев назад +139

    My husband has a total cholesterol over 350 most of his life. All other bloodwork, BP, weight fine. Now 70, is still in perfect health, no meds. On traditional 60s diet. Meat, fish, eggs, lots of dairy, some veges and an apple a day, plus cod liver oil. Last time sick was 1980 with a mild cold. Not genetic. His siblings, children and grandchildren get all the normal seasonal ills.

    • @angelatakano6072
      @angelatakano6072 3 месяца назад +3

      He doesn’t need anything. Just have him done a coronary calcium score and a carotid plaque scan

    • @archael18
      @archael18 3 месяца назад +3

      Last time sick 44 years ago... I definitely call bullshit on that.

    • @karylmorgan7320
      @karylmorgan7320 2 месяца назад +1

      @@glenyst5216 I always eat an apple a day and an orange if they are good, no matter what else I eat.

    • @carolsachse6729
      @carolsachse6729 2 месяца назад

      @@angelatakano6072

    • @richardf911
      @richardf911 Месяц назад

      Low cholesterol is deadly.

  • @KellyMcCulloughffn
    @KellyMcCulloughffn Год назад +99

    I'm glad you mentioned insulin sensitivity and oxidization of cells. Much bigger need for this focus.

  • @BlanchePerle
    @BlanchePerle Год назад +128

    My LDL was always high, last time over 300 and my cardiologist from Cleveland Clinic did not worry about it (like me) Had a heart cath 1 year ago and all is fine. I am 69 yrs.

    • @nishihundan1257
      @nishihundan1257 10 месяцев назад +4

      LOL, sorry, but I call BS. No doctor would perform a cardiac catheterization just because someone has high LDL.

    • @thankyou4328
      @thankyou4328 10 месяцев назад +14

      @@nishihundan1257 Work on your reading comprehension. He said he had a heart cath 1 year ago. He did not say that he had the heart cath due to his high LDL.

    • @CherylAtchley-l4i
      @CherylAtchley-l4i 9 месяцев назад +3

      Please , who is your Cardiologist from the Cleveland clinic!? I need that one!

    • @kalsoomsaeed6582
      @kalsoomsaeed6582 6 месяцев назад +1

      My cath was clear. My ldl 120 and Hal 45 total cholesterol 160. My doctor put me 20 mg statin. My total came to 90 ldl 30 Hal 45. But A1c was 6.5 which I think was result of taking statins. But doctor still put me on 10 mg statin. I have bad leg pain. Thinking to quit statins

    • @sharoniles9545
      @sharoniles9545 5 месяцев назад

      @@kalsoomsaeed6582 A1c can rise, and muscles problems can occur on statins, as well as dementia type symptoms. Consider taking CoQ10 and see how you do without statins for a period of time. If you improve, you'll have your answer.

  • @robertjeffery6100
    @robertjeffery6100 Год назад +122

    I was on statins my legs hurt so bad I could barely drive my car or sit for anytime… my doctor told me it’s probably a pinched nerve… I quit taking the meds in less than a year my legs are fine

    • @melb9038
      @melb9038 9 месяцев назад +7

      same here the muscles aches were horrific 😢

    • @doloresbutler3
      @doloresbutler3 7 месяцев назад +2

      Same here

    • @juju-july
      @juju-july 6 месяцев назад +3

      Happens all the time!

    • @carlechevarria2226
      @carlechevarria2226 6 месяцев назад +8

      Glad you mentioned the timeline of your recovery I was on Statins for long time and took me a long time to get over it. Drs. say recovery can't be that long. I disagree. The research on statins is flawed. There was an article some years ago in the New York Times about the benefits of statins. There were some 1700 comments to the contrary.

    • @elsajones3686
      @elsajones3686 5 месяцев назад +1

      I’m trying to get my mother to at least temporarily quit taking statins hoping it will help ease neuropathy in her legs. How many months did it take before you started feeling better?

  • @martibee4140
    @martibee4140 5 месяцев назад +43

    I was diagnosed with high cholesterol about 15 years ago and was put on Lipitor. Within 2 weeks it caused me to be temporarily paralyzed, for several hours. The Dr took me off the Lipitor, & put me on another statin, that one caused me to be temporarily paralyzed also, except it took a month before the paralysis happened. Then the Dr put me on prescription Niacin, which caused me to break out in hives. I can't take any of those meds for lowering my cholesterol. When I see my GP doctor, he tests my cholesterol & says "you have elevated cholesterol, don't worry about it". And I'm always careful about what I eat, to keep my cholesterol down.

    • @obicat
      @obicat 4 месяца назад +8

      I really hate any pill that messes around with the liver and kidneys...which almost all do.

    • @verborgenewahrheit1594
      @verborgenewahrheit1594 4 месяца назад +1

      @@obicat
      Very astute observation

    • @HR-wd6cw
      @HR-wd6cw Месяц назад

      I've been on it for well over 10 years. Never had issues. My guess is that it may be something else interacting with the statin, but not the statin itself as it's deemed safe in most medical literature. Given your story you've shared, it sounds like you may have some other medical issues going on that is not being disclosed (not being rude, but this sounds a bit extreme). I also took Niaccin for a few years, and aside from the "flush" nothing negative happened either, but that's just me.

    • @tim71pos
      @tim71pos Месяц назад +1

      The problem is a simplistic thought that what goes in is what comes out. My grandmother had a heart attack in the 1960s and so she started taking a walk everyday and stop eating eggs and butter. She lived another 20 years. But that's not how you lower cholesterol. Cholesterol deposits form because of inflammation of the arteries and the culprits there are usually white flower and sugar otherwise known as processed foods.

  • @jcmemerizing4984
    @jcmemerizing4984 10 месяцев назад +148

    I’m no doctor, but I ignored my doctor’s advice about taking a statin for persistently high LDL. I did this because I have been an endurance athlete for my adult life. Tip top shape. But as my LDL numbers deteriorated into my 50’s my doctor ordered a CTA. I had extensive plaque scoring and was more than 50 percent occluded on the right side. A 91st percentile (bad) for my age score. I have no idea if my condition would have changed had I started a statin 20 years ago. But I’m on one now and tolerating it well. The conflicting advice is so hard to sort through.

    • @edy8695
      @edy8695 10 месяцев назад +9

      Hi. Thank you for telling us your story. I'am a cardiologist in Europe. I have many patients who play any kind of sport in a high level over age 50.
      Yes its true, some of them are on statin medication for a long time and they didn't get these dreaded disease such arterial sclerosis, stroke or coronary artery disease or myocardial infarction. Those patient who gone have benefit ftom statin therapy must be selected properly. Sports can be a dangerous thing if you do this wit athersclerotic diseaese.

    • @jeffroberts760
      @jeffroberts760 10 месяцев назад +6

      I wonder if your activity level is to blame for atherosclerosis or if linoleic acid intake is high or both
      What is your fasting insulin as Saladino suggested in this video?

    • @jcmemerizing4984
      @jcmemerizing4984 10 месяцев назад

      My fasting insulin is 98. I don't doubt that my diet has contributed to my numbers. My most recent lipid profile from just this past week was triglycerides 58, LDL 77 HDL 69...so the Crestor is working for me. Still hate having to take it. @@jeffroberts760

    • @cjljr41
      @cjljr41 10 месяцев назад +10

      Similar story for me. Always had high cholesterol, but chose not to take statins because I exercised regularly and questioned the effectiveness of them. Ended up having quadruple bypass surgery at age 54. That was two years ago and I now take my statins daily with no side effects.

    • @te7931
      @te7931 10 месяцев назад

      Your body makes cholesterol. The brain requires it. But you're all bought in so not much anyone can do for you

  • @CookingwithDesi
    @CookingwithDesi Год назад +185

    My Dr wanted to put me on a statin also for elevated LDL & total cholesterol. I had a cardiac cath for what turned out to be esophageal erosions. The cardiologist said I have the heart of an 18 year old. No blockages. Thank you for your in depth teaching on this topic! ❤

    • @truno7
      @truno7 Год назад +2

      They didn’t run a Cardiac CT Angiogram first before running the catheter?

    • @CookingwithDesi
      @CookingwithDesi Год назад

      I’m not sure, I’ll have to get a copy of the report.

    • @Quintessentialmen
      @Quintessentialmen Год назад +2

      Thanks for sharing that

    • @seona6549
      @seona6549 Год назад +2

      What did you do for the esophageal erosion?

    • @CookingwithDesi
      @CookingwithDesi Год назад

      @@seona6549 I had to stop taking Excedrin migraine and took Omeprazole for a little while.

  • @cheriemanrique8044
    @cheriemanrique8044 Год назад +158

    Wonderful explanation.
    My husband just went on the carnivore diet because of rheumatoid arthiritis. He is active and has a physically demanding job so he goes to the gym regularly to prevent injury at work. Once I put him on the carnivore diet his pain in joints got better. Also his love handles disappeared and he lost that extra weight he's been trying to get rid of.
    He went for his annual physical and he came back with high LDL. First time in his life. Dr told him to eat less meat and stay away from animal butter. But that's been his main diet. His blood sugar leveL came back normal as did his triglycerides and HDL.

    • @bcro83
      @bcro83 Год назад +19

      so hes fine is all you gotta know

    • @PTucker0864
      @PTucker0864 Год назад +39

      Same here......raised HDL, lowered trigs, but raised LDL.
      Doc says.....Keep doing what you're doing, but stay away from red meat and eggs.
      That's how I got there! 😂 😂😂

    • @DaveOriginallyfromBrooklyn
      @DaveOriginallyfromBrooklyn Год назад +3

      If you believe this doc he’s fine.

    • @SomeBlackGuy
      @SomeBlackGuy Год назад

      High LDL can easily lead to heart attack and stroke. It’s literally the number one killer in the U.S. you can have clogged arteries and look healthy. It’s insane to ignore this obvious information. Getting advice from people who don’t understand this simple concept is dangerous

    • @ArcoZakus
      @ArcoZakus Год назад +1

      @@PTucker0864,
      Similar situation for me, except that my Dr. said he has patients who eat 5 or more whole eggs every day who have lower LDL-c than mine. (He has never seen anyone's even half as high as mine is now. I was more worried about him having a heart attack than I was for me.)
      He knows I will not take drugs, so he suggested eliminating bacon for a month or so and re-test, and add an extra egg or two to the two I eat now if I need them to make up for the missing bacon.
      Not sure how that will affect percent of calories from fat vs protein yet, but it sure won't be as satisfying. Lots more videos to evaluate...

  • @janetw9430
    @janetw9430 Год назад +284

    Canola oil was developed for lubricating machinery.

    • @moulindaccessoire.3072
      @moulindaccessoire.3072 8 месяцев назад +1

      😂

    • @grimreality451
      @grimreality451 8 месяцев назад +23

      Avoid seed oils and sugar.

    • @stepchicken3238
      @stepchicken3238 7 месяцев назад +5

      @@grimreality451 Yes, I was surprised/disappointed that the Doc recommended it; rings a bell: what else did he get wrong?

    • @orion5813
      @orion5813 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@grimreality451Do not avoid sugar

    • @ronnaalthoff9175
      @ronnaalthoff9175 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@orion5813most sugar…not all. And make sure it’s organic

  • @Staronqueen
    @Staronqueen 9 месяцев назад +11

    0:59 That’s me, he just described my experience. Twelve years ago, at the age of 60, I was told that my cholesterol levels were high and needed to go on the prescribed medication. I said no thanks. Here I am in my 70’s in good health, don’t smoke, very conscious of what I eat, I don’t eat red meat; I will have a glass of wine with my meal on special occasions. I practice yoga, and walk to all my day to day activities i.e appointments, shopping etc. I have maintained the same 120lbs all my adult life. And yet my doctor is lecturing me about the dangers I would face if I don’t take statins to reduce “high cholesterol” The doctor’s explanation for my high levels of cholesterol is “genetics” I am not buying his explanation. If my genetics is the reason, then my body is okay with it.
    I refuse to take a drug because that is not a cure. The said doctor told me that he would no longer have me take any more cholesterol tests in the future because I refused to go on his prescribed statins.

    • @karus459
      @karus459 6 месяцев назад

      You can get the pill, but don't drink it.

  • @TheZig726
    @TheZig726 10 месяцев назад +373

    I've never had a doctor ask me about my diet.

    • @peredavi
      @peredavi 10 месяцев назад +49

      American doctors treat symptoms and prescribe pharmaceuticals.

    • @jakeb934
      @jakeb934 9 месяцев назад +1

      My primary care doctor and every single primary care doctor I have ever had has asked me about my diet, pretty substantially. Im in the U.S. Doctors aren't bad.

    • @nickrieff5096
      @nickrieff5096 8 месяцев назад +3

      Me either and I'm type 2 diabetic and have high cholesterol

    • @ShawnKepner_YouTube
      @ShawnKepner_YouTube 8 месяцев назад +5

      They never do.

    • @francescatimpano3470
      @francescatimpano3470 8 месяцев назад

      Because they don't sell you food, they sell you drugs

  • @brianwong
    @brianwong Год назад +336

    I remember in the late 70s and early 80s, my relatives who were doctors boasted about being invited on "conferences" on luxury cruises by pharma reps, who told them how much money they would earn prescribing statins where patients would have to buy them for life.

    • @wendyporter4338
      @wendyporter4338 11 месяцев назад +28

      That's so bad but I can believe it.

    • @08turboSS
      @08turboSS 10 месяцев назад +18

      Its been the same the last 4 yrs. and will continue if the w ee eff get their way.

    • @08turboSS
      @08turboSS 10 месяцев назад +4

      Its been the same the last 4 yrs. and will continue if the w ee eff get their way.

    • @wendyporter4338
      @wendyporter4338 10 месяцев назад +11

      Sooo if you get the 'no name' or chemist brand, do Dr's still get a kickback? And how does the kickback work .. Dr's name on the prescribed drug, so they get a %. Just curious...🤫

    • @TraciDoering-hw8hu
      @TraciDoering-hw8hu 8 месяцев назад +8

      @@wendyporter4338 not sure about that. Good question.

  • @stanleysokolow
    @stanleysokolow Год назад +33

    The standard lipids panel tests the amount of cholesterol in the LDL particles, which is notated "LDL-C". The particles could be large or small and still have the same LDL-C. The current theory of atherosclerosis says that the LDL particles penetrated into the wall of the artery through narrow channels between the endothelial cells that line the artery. Small particles can move through the channels (junctions) more easily than large ones. A measure that is correlated with LDL size is the ratio of triglycerides/HDL-C which you can calculate from standard simple lipids tests that are usually done. If the ratio (in American units of mg/dL) is less than 2, that's a preponderance of the large "fluffy" LDL particles, which is not atherogenic. Trig/HDL-C is affected by your insulin sensitivity, so keep your diet low in carbohydrates (especially sugar) to keep trig/HDL-C low, the theory says. But it's more complex than just LDL size. There is a brush-like fibrous gel coating the endothelial cells including over the junctions, called the endothelial glycocalyx, which acts as a filter among other functions, preventing large particles like red blood cells and large LDL from penetrating through the junctions. Experiments in mice have shown that the glycocalyx is damaged and thinned or absent at locations where atherosclerotic plaques usually occur.

    • @MrMicahz28
      @MrMicahz28 Год назад +3

      Very well stated and duly noted

    • @ShoppingEmail-dr1fs
      @ShoppingEmail-dr1fs 3 месяца назад

      how does this all happen when blood is moving so fast?

  • @Roadpizza
    @Roadpizza Год назад +213

    Statins are poison to me!

    • @carl8568
      @carl8568 6 месяцев назад +8

      They are poisons, period.

    • @LeslieDelgado-l4v
      @LeslieDelgado-l4v 3 месяца назад

      I agree. I read about the side effects and I was like forget it. I actually asked my endo about my cholesterol, and he said I didn't need a statin bc I didn't suffer from any other ailments such as diabetes or being overweight.

  • @DevinAngus
    @DevinAngus 5 месяцев назад +30

    I’m 42 and have always had cholesterol over 220. As high as 400. Normally it’s around 300. But my HDL is normal 60+ and my triglycerides are under 100. I’m very active and fit and avoid most sugar and carbs and eat organic and grass fed and feel great. This video was the best I’ve seen and super comforting and informative. Thank you!

    • @danloomis
      @danloomis 25 дней назад

      I suggest getting a CIMT or a CTA to make sure you’re not getting plaque accumulation. I had a high school friend drop dead of an MI in front of my teenage son. He was 50; you don’t want to be that guy.

    • @DevinAngus
      @DevinAngus 22 дня назад

      @ calcium score is zero. That guy likely had familiar history, other factors, extremely stressed etc.

  • @SeriousKeto
    @SeriousKeto 11 месяцев назад +79

    Absolutely the best explanation of LDL I've seen. I feel well armed for the inevitable statin conversation I'll be having during my annual physical in two weeks. Thank you!

    • @joefarah
      @joefarah 10 месяцев назад +8

      How’d it go? I have mine on Monday and every year I feel like I have to repeat the same thing and say thank you for your concern, but I’m willing to take the risk.

  • @rolandlickert2904
    @rolandlickert2904 Год назад +33

    For a long time, I had high cholesterol around 250 I started a Keto Diet and some Mediterranean checked again and it went up to 285>My guess is I did eat too much Meat and dairy products and coconut milk/cream for my espresso and too much eggs. Of course, my doctor wanted to put me on Satin right away but I convinced her to wait for two months reduce my meat intake and cut all dairy products .Use clarified butter and virgin olive oil but mostly virgin coconut oil . But as I found out the keito diet raises the cholesterol? My glucose level is fine (avoid sugar) my blood pressure is 108 to 120 0ver 75

    • @darrylhopcutt2166
      @darrylhopcutt2166 7 месяцев назад

      Lean mass hyper responder

    • @s.akhtarjoomun263
      @s.akhtarjoomun263 3 месяца назад

      I'm eating too much eggs too. And nowadays, I experience slight heart palpitation after eating 10 eggs. I wonder if I should be worried about that.

  • @janetgies8698
    @janetgies8698 8 месяцев назад +21

    Statins don’t even reduce LDL - It triggers more HDL Receptors. Hooray for Burgers ❣️

  • @TheUrbanOutdoorsmen
    @TheUrbanOutdoorsmen 10 месяцев назад +38

    I went in for my annual check up in my 20’s and my doctor decided to check my cholesterol for no apparent reason. I hadn’t fasted since I didn’t know it was going to be a blood draw visit and my cholesterol was super high. He wanted to put me on medication and I refused and insisted that we do another test but this time when I had fasted. He was annoyed but allowed me to do it again. Wouldn’t you know that my cholesterol was fine when tested correctly.

    • @29Staples
      @29Staples 9 месяцев назад +8

      "Allowed"??
      You hired HIM! A doctor is supposed to be working for YOU.

    • @HarleyKatz
      @HarleyKatz 9 месяцев назад +1

      The exact same thing happened to me.

    • @iremwa776
      @iremwa776 4 месяца назад

      Just ridiculously, ridiculous, that's a quack 🤬 😮

  • @Over-for-now
    @Over-for-now 11 месяцев назад +35

    I'm 78 non diabetic and my cholesterol is always 260 . Triglycerides under 90. The Drs hate me because I won't go on statins.
    My husband is 80 and diabetic and his cholesterol is always under 200. The Drs get mad at him too because he won't go on statins 😢😮

    • @analarson2920
      @analarson2920 5 месяцев назад

      Wow crazy doctors. My uncle stroked out from stations.

    • @IkennaOpara-y6g
      @IkennaOpara-y6g 3 месяца назад

      Oh my God. They just want to force the dreadful pill down people's throat

    • @rodrigobalibalita12
      @rodrigobalibalita12 Месяц назад +1

      It's business. So many testimonies on this drug and most of them complaints on muscle pain from mild to severe. Some doctors were saying that it can cause damage to your liver and your kidney also.

  • @GStroud8801
    @GStroud8801 Год назад +17

    LDL 222, HDL 68, calcium score 1600, told to get on statin. I am very active - exercise 7 days a week, run and lift weights. Boby weight low. Questioning the recommendation to take statin.

    • @GarrettMiles5623
      @GarrettMiles5623 8 месяцев назад +2

      *I'm not a doctor* so take this for what it is. According to Dr. Saladino If you have plaque build up (High Calcium Score) it's because you have arterial damage and the LDL is trying to heal the damage. The Doctor said to have your fasting insulin checked if high LDL does occur to see if you have insulin resistance which can cause arterial damage. *Once again I'm not a doctor* but Since you have a high Calcium Score (plaque build up) it would probably benefit you to A. just to be safe lower your saturated fat intake to slow the build up until you figure out if you have insulin resistance Or B. just get your insulin resistance tested and if something needs to change in your diet/health go from their. But that is a very high C score so A. may be the way to go. But if your anything like me I do what I want and so should you. 😉

  • @garydumas3148
    @garydumas3148 Год назад +69

    My cholesterol has been high(210-230) most of my adult life. I am 5’10” and 170 lbs with 34 inch waist. Completed carotid, femerol, and heart scans at 63 years, zero plaque detected. My doc feels the high cholesterol readings are ok if I continue to exercise and keep my weight in check, and likely how my personal genetics deals with the cholesterol. So no statins have been subscribed, now 68 years old.

    • @garydumas3148
      @garydumas3148 Год назад +5

      P.s. never got COVID to my knowledge, haven’t had a cold in years, no never caught the flu.

    • @johnycash8291
      @johnycash8291 10 месяцев назад

      My cholesterol is 230, I am 5,10”, 180 Lbs. Waist is 32. That must a standard size for average male. 😂😂 too funny. Shoe size 10. 😂

    • @directajith
      @directajith 3 месяца назад

      230 ldl or total chol?

  • @Peaches-o5y
    @Peaches-o5y 2 месяца назад +45

    My very slim, sprightly 88 year old mum stopped taking her Statins three months ago since I have shown her these videos. All of the pains in her legs have since gone.

    • @user-cx5ni7me6l
      @user-cx5ni7me6l 3 дня назад +1

      Why didn't her doctor researched the leg pain? Did he/she think the pain was less of a problem than the benefits?
      Good her pain is gone now :)!

  • @lanceshaw4421
    @lanceshaw4421 10 месяцев назад +59

    I would love to hear Dr. Saladino debate with Dr. Attia on cholesterol, apoB and statins

    • @meiosys
      @meiosys 9 месяцев назад

      hmm...a psychiatrist debating an actual physician on cardiovascular health. Attia wins based on credentials alone, but noone will ever believe him because people believe what they want to believe. Just look at this comment section.

    • @Sazi16
      @Sazi16 7 месяцев назад +7

      Yesssss I have been thinking this, I can't decide who is correct and it's driving me nuts, I need the truth!

    • @lisalipari673
      @lisalipari673 7 месяцев назад +3

      I am a 52 yr old 20+x 70.3 triathlete and my apo A just came back through the roof (300 range 🫣) I’ve been a an athlete and a health nut all of my life and my dr says I have to go on a statin. I just can’t do it. I’m also a ND and It goes against everything I believe in.

    • @anntaylor8065
      @anntaylor8065 6 месяцев назад

      @@lisalipari673 Is that the same as lipoprotein a? My sister was diagnosed with lipo a and specialist said that statin would make it worse.

    • @MuffinstoMangos
      @MuffinstoMangos 2 месяца назад

      I'd like him to debate Dr off CNN. Forgot his name.

  • @vaijayantibhattacharjee4391
    @vaijayantibhattacharjee4391 6 месяцев назад +14

    Exactly the clarity i have been trying to get for a long time. Thanks a lot.

  • @Peter-pv4yb
    @Peter-pv4yb 11 месяцев назад +30

    Wow, this guy!👍👍 This is exactly what I was looking for! Thanks a million

  • @YukonRJ
    @YukonRJ Год назад +31

    I have significantly high familial cholesterol levels. No one in the family has passed away because of heart disease or heart attack. I had a coronary calcium score done and it is also super high. Yet blood pressure is 120/80 and no issues on the treadmill or exercising. Yet the doctor wants me to be on a statin which I have done and now I have bodyaches. Should probably quit.

    • @blackmangopit
      @blackmangopit 9 месяцев назад +6

      I could have written this myself - same for me. My blood pressure is low 110/70 and I think that's because I take K2. My cardiologist didn't know anything about K2 and said I need statins...I continue to refuse.

    • @karencilman3002
      @karencilman3002 4 месяца назад +1

      Yes, you should stop taking the statins and control your calcium and cholesterol levels with diet. Especially if you experience body aches.

    • @Yusuf-kn6tg
      @Yusuf-kn6tg 3 месяца назад +1

      Same here ,like you(familial and extremely high) was on it for 30 years ,just decided to stop about five years ago
      How high are your numbers though ?
      (I was around 12 Total cholesterol )

  • @alchemy1
    @alchemy1 Год назад +98

    5’7”. I am 65 years old. After 6 months on a Keto diet here is the result.
    Heartburns gone
    Dry flakey skin gone
    Body itching gone
    Sensing things crawling on my skin or hair gone
    Heart palpitation gone
    Stomach pains..gone.
    Always some black heads somewhere on my face. gone
    A bump, ingrown hair on my leg for years just suddenly came off. Poof, gone.
    Lightheadedness, gone.
    There was a strange, odd itch on the side of my left foot. I inherited it from my ex wife. she got it from someone else, it would appear every so often, gone.
    Bleeding gums here and there I used to get when flossing, gone
    Back pain, neck pain especially when I get up in the morning, gone.
    Glass/shard feeling in my elbows gone,
    I just don’t seem to notice any hemorrhage, gone
    Dandruff gone.
    Most of the floaters in my eyes, gone.
    Restless leg syndrome I had once in a while, gone.
    Man boobs, gone
    Love handles, gone.
    Peeling finger nails, gone.
    Hives and bumps on my skin every so often.. gone.
    =====================================
    Added bonuses:
    Feeling of comfort inside my body at all times.
    I tolerate cold and hot weather far better. Very interesting.
    Unlike before when my feet hurt after walking for a mile or two, I can walk for miles and miles without any pain whatsoever.
    I don’t feel bogged down.. Just a fresher energy. The air feels better and my mood is simply much lighter and better.
    Sleep is much more restful
    Eyes look more clear, more whiter. . Just found out by going to the eye doctor that my eye pressure has dropped from 15-17 to 10-12. No wonder.
    Both of my nostrils are evenly open… I can breathe from both nicely.
    I don’t get cuts easily. Stronger skin.
    Emotional health better than anytime in my life
    Mental clarity and alertness, very good.
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    HDL-C went from 40 to 75
    Triglycerides went from 225 to 49
    A1C dropped from 5.7 to 5.3. Not sure how long I have had high blood glucose.
    Weight loss without hardship, 210 to 170 lbs.
    Average blood pressure dropped from 140/90 to 120/75 =================================================
    The so-called bad:
    Total cholesterol from 183 to 491
    LDL-C from 104 to 350
    GIVEN EVERYTHING YOU HAVE READ DO YOU THINK I CARE ABOUT THE LAST TWO NUMBERS….?. NOT.
    Chances are they will hit 1000 in another year’s time. Read my lips I won't give a damn. That is right.
    =========================================
    And oh hear this:
    So it just came to me that I hardly poop much. With all the heavy duty meat and eggs I eat everyday, where on earth do they go?
    I poop maybe once every 3 to 4 days. What on earth?
    No, I have no stomach cramps or aches or anything that resembles any discomfort. And absolutely no gas at any time.
    What on earth?
    The truth is:
    The body uses all of it for nutrients. There is hardly any waste and THAT IS THE TRUTH..
    Your typically mumbo jumbo carb diets cause every mischief there is including and not limited to gas and poops and the rest.
    Bara bang bada boom. 😂

    • @SuperScottschannel
      @SuperScottschannel Год назад +10

      I eat carnivore now and feel 20 years younger. Got rid of all the poisons I was eating.

    • @mrofnocnon
      @mrofnocnon Год назад +12

      It's not just what you are eating now. But the garbage you are not eating any longer.

    • @zenfan1098
      @zenfan1098 Год назад +2

      I'm 60, 5 7, 133lb, long story I won't get into but my one question, and the Drs don't know or care, they just want to big pharma me, my question is , I Have Multiple Sclerosis, I eat low sugar, low saturated fats, but I don't eat red meat, only chicken, turkey and salmon, what , in your opinion, and what do you actually eat for Keto and to get into ketosis, I don't have a lot of fat on me at all, do I eat the fat foods to burn fat?? or how does that work for you ?? I don't know what fatty food to eat that's healthy, I thought keto was healthy fats not fat fats , I'm so confused, Drs don't want me to do keto but I want to so that's why I'm asking you, you seem smart with this.
      Thank you if you decide to comment back !!!
      Have a nice day 😊

    • @mrofnocnon
      @mrofnocnon Год назад +8

      @@zenfan1098In carnivore is not just that you eat the meat of ruminants which chicken, turkey and salmon are not but its what you don't eat. Just try it for a month and see.

    • @zenfan1098
      @zenfan1098 Год назад +1

      @@mrofnocnon ok, I might sound ignorant by your answer, but try what for a month, just eating the meat only, or 😵‍💫I guess I don't understand the answer,I'm sorry 😔

  • @1Life2Little
    @1Life2Little 10 месяцев назад +136

    I needed to hear this... I was on carnivore diet and all my bloodwork was perfect all but my LDL... Before I started carnivore diet I was pre diabetic and had high blood pressure... I had fatty liver and I had joint pains in my arms and legs. Everything disappeared and I was devastated when my doctor said I needed to stop my diet and he wanted me to take pills for the cholesterol. I am obese too and I lost 60 pounds in half a year... I will now start up my carnivore diet again and tell my doctor to go to hell. If I die I die happier, lighter and with no pains.

    • @TraciDoering-hw8hu
      @TraciDoering-hw8hu 8 месяцев назад +8

      SMART! Good for you!

    • @MonicaMiller-fk8dn
      @MonicaMiller-fk8dn 7 месяцев назад +3

      What about eating lean meat, and lots of fish?

    • @barryhall5125
      @barryhall5125 6 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@MonicaMiller-fk8dn That's fine if you're also cutting out carbs. Though you'd need to get saturated fats from somewhere.
      If you're talking about low-fat high carb diet - that doesn't seem to work for most people.

    • @victoriabarrientos3280
      @victoriabarrientos3280 4 месяца назад +1

      Good for you!

    • @ingeamanda
      @ingeamanda 3 месяца назад

      Buena decisión

  • @tomellicott5709
    @tomellicott5709 6 месяцев назад +92

    Don’t fight your doc when they insist that you go on a statin - they get their feelings hurt and are insulted - just tell them you have terrible side effects
    They have to recommend them - and they’ll never know you are throwing them away
    I have had cholesterol nearing and over 300 for 30 years and I’m in great shape - and have been on Keto for years

    • @robinrose5991
      @robinrose5991 5 месяцев назад +12

      I did that for years! Every time I got labs come back with high cholesterol, my doctors wanted to put me on a statin medication. I have Degenerative Bone & Disc disease so I live in pain constantly. Instead of arguing with my doctor, I'd take the script, never fill it, call 2 weeks later complaining of "bad aching from the medicine" and then I started taking otc Niacin which actually helped me. This was before electronic monitoring started. Now if my doctor tries giving me a statin I just flat out refuse. Most times I trust my doctors, but with medications, I don't blindly take them just because they say to. I will research before because a lot of times the side effects can be a hell of a lot worse than the problem they're prescribed for.

    • @barbarakuks2034
      @barbarakuks2034 5 месяцев назад +7

      Just say " no thanks ". I've done my homework on statins.

    • @daleneoberholster125
      @daleneoberholster125 4 месяца назад +6

      My doctor described Statins. I got the Statins from my fharmasist. He must make a living. When I came home, I throw the Statins in the toilet because I have to live too.

    • @ccaselli7
      @ccaselli7 4 месяца назад

      ​I'm sorry , but that's not going to change a corrupt system....its a big Pharma money making evil scam....and needs to be called out for being so. Have courage , stand up for truth..

    • @ed5141
      @ed5141 4 месяца назад +8

      ​@daleneoberholster125 shouldn't throw away meds in toilet, it goes into water supply

  • @ultrarnr4454
    @ultrarnr4454 10 месяцев назад +19

    I find a lot of physicians are pissed at the internet because people can now educate themselves and keep up with current medical trends, something a lot of doctors don't do. My heart Dr only worries about cholesterol and always pushed statins. That's why I am looking for a new one!

    • @rochellefreeland4338
      @rochellefreeland4338 5 месяцев назад

      I cannot reply. It is like a maze to do so. You are so correct. It is about medical freedom! They do not want that. From
      What I understand they lowered the number to start pushing the statins sooner. The beast system is so crooked!

    • @rochellefreeland4338
      @rochellefreeland4338 5 месяцев назад

      I cannot reply. It is like a maze to do so. You are so correct. It is about medical freedom! They do not want that. From
      What I understand they lowered the number to start pushing the statins sooner. The beast system is so crooked!

  • @robertkoehler7524
    @robertkoehler7524 Год назад +39

    That was just flat out excellent. Total cholesterol 222, LDL 133, HDL 59, Trig. 150. Doc convinced me take a statin a month ago to reduce LDL. I am 5"8" 142 lbs. Very active runner. Rethinking my decision.

    • @marsha2061
      @marsha2061 Год назад

      Get off the statins. They cause dementia. I had a heart attack and they put me on them and I was miserable. I'm taking nothing now because I'd rather have another heart attack than take their poison.

    • @stargazer5797
      @stargazer5797 Год назад +6

      If you tweak your diet a bit, eat more vegetables and fruit and less meat, your ldl will go down. Also keep the inflammation and processed food and sugar down.

    • @HealingLifeKwikly
      @HealingLifeKwikly Год назад

      "That was just flat out excellent. Total cholesterol 222, LDL 133, HDL 59, Trig. 150. Doc convinced me take a statin a month ago to reduce LDL. I am 5"8" 142 lbs. Very active runner. Rethinking my decision." Except Saladino's claims have been widely de-bunked and speaking as a researcher who studies nutrition myths, the study he is referring to is junk science that made me so mad I had to go work out to blow off the steam. Go over to Nutrition Made Simple on RUclips: Best neutral and science-based site with clear explanations. The truly normal range for LDL is more like 30-70, plaque and rates of major CVD events increase the higher you get above 70, but the real problem is elevated apoB levels, and with LDL more than double what is physiologically normal/healthy and TG levels that high, your apoB is probably too high. Unfortunately, being a runner doesn't fix it: Diet matters more than exercise for this (although exercise is still great). Have a relative who ran 30 marathons then found out he had a CAC score of 700--meaning advanced heart disease.

    • @honkhonk1555
      @honkhonk1555 11 месяцев назад +2

      What’s your diet look like overall?

    • @08turboSS
      @08turboSS 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@stargazer579790% of grocery stores are processed junk imcluding yogurt and cheerios.

  • @keithfrancis9293
    @keithfrancis9293 Год назад +28

    Nice post Dr.Paul.
    Cholesterol in the blood does not cause atherosclerosis and is essential for the brain.
    Calcium in the blood does cause atherosclerosis.

    • @bhartley868
      @bhartley868 4 месяца назад +2

      K 2 and D 3, drive calcium into the bones where you want it. Info available on You Tube.

    • @r0bt93
      @r0bt93 3 месяца назад +4

      No, cholesterol in the blood absolutely causes atherosclerosis. It's crazy that people here are falling for this grifter despite the mountains of evidence to his contrary.

    • @viviendaquino8364
      @viviendaquino8364 18 дней назад

      ​@@r0bt93💯

  • @tanfel4
    @tanfel4 Год назад +74

    This is hands down the best explanation of LDL, HDL, and Diabetes on RUclips. Bravo Dr. Saladino, thank you so very much, your explanation of what is happening in the body and what is happening was great!

    • @cyberfunk3793
      @cyberfunk3793 Год назад +4

      From the guy that preached carnivore for ages, until he self ditched the diet because he was completely wrong about it. I don't understand why anyone takes anything he says seriously.

    • @tanfel4
      @tanfel4 Год назад

      I need to learn more about what you're saying. Thanks for this post. @@cyberfunk3793

    • @HealingLifeKwikly
      @HealingLifeKwikly Год назад

      "his is hands down the best explanation of LDL, HDL, and Diabetes on RUclips." NO, the best explanations of the topic are over at the Nutrition Made Simple website--very deep and neutral discussions of all sorts of topics--and he tactfully demolishes the terrible study that Paul talks about here. I research and teach nutrition and saw how terribly flawed that study was, but Gil explains it better on his site at ""The Truth about Saturated Fat | New Narrative Review"

    • @dc6953
      @dc6953 Год назад +7

      @@cyberfunk3793 Dude added a hand sized portion of fruit with each meal and all of a sudden the guy has completely moved off his stance in regard to a proper human diet?
      Nah, dudes still preaching extremely low carbs and meat, eggs, and dairy. I mean he adjusted his argument (on diet) at best, not dropped it.
      It’s like saying (hypothetically) that Stalin, instead of slaughtering all citizens, he “dropped” his stance because he wouldn’t kill kids under 5. Like it’s still mass genocide.
      Similarly, it’s still a near all protein diet, more specifically an animal base diet.
      Let’s not exaggerate as if, by adding fruit, the guy’s argument regarding diet is suddenly, completely void of all credibility. And that he is now a vegan.

    • @cyberfunk3793
      @cyberfunk3793 Год назад +2

      @@dc6953 extremely low carb? 😂 Dude got his testosterone destroyed on the poor carnivore diet so now he eats honey which is basically sugar. He eats hundreds of grams carbs a day.
      "The fruit Saladino eats are mostly tropical and local varieties of pineapple, mangos, and papaya. These constitute up to 200-300 grams of carbohydrates in a day. "

  • @ronstan3064
    @ronstan3064 Месяц назад

    1. Introduction and Common Misconception - 0:00: Discussion about the misconception regarding high LDL and immediate prescription of statins.
    2. Understanding LDL - 0:32: Dr. Saladino describes LDL as a carrier of essential nutrients and its functions in the body.
    3. Role of Cholesterol in Health - 1:58: Explanation on how cholesterol deficiency affects health and the importance of LDL in combating infections.
    4. Atherosclerosis Explained - 4:12: Detailed breakdown of how atherosclerosis develops and its relationship with LDL levels.
    5. HDL and Metabolic Health Correlation - 5:12: Discussion on the correlation between HDL, insulin sensitivity, and heart disease.
    6. Critique of Statins and Misdiagnosis - 7:48: Criticism of statin prescription without considering metabolic health markers like fasting insulin.
    7. Dietary Fats and Cholesterol Relationship - 9:45: Insights into how different types of dietary fats affect LDL and overall cholesterol.
    8. Oxidized LDL as a Key Factor - 17:06: The importance of monitoring oxidized LDL and polyunsaturated fats in cardiovascular health.
    9. Conclusion - 18:38: Final thoughts and recommendations for a holistic approach to cholesterol management.

  • @greentruck2wa
    @greentruck2wa 11 месяцев назад +3

    I do agree about checking insulin resistance and lipids when getting blood work done and not jumping straight on the statin train if your LDL is high. And yes, diet will change everything. But, at 2:35, wanna know when a "good" molecule is bad for your body? It's when there's so many (busses on the road that creates a traffic jam) no other nutrients can go anywhere. Now I had a heart attack 13 years ago due to high cholesterol. I watch my cholesterol levels like a hawk. I've done my share of research, and years of my own trial and errors. And I will takes this my grave, there is a such thing as too much cholesterol.

  • @tenniskinsella7768
    @tenniskinsella7768 Год назад +10

    My aunt died at 102. She had high colestral but dr took her off the highest dose too many side effects. Because she took quite a lot of other tablets. Shebroke her hip at 99 survived that after that hD carers but was quite happy hadxa lot if visitors also had irregular heart beat. Some people defy the odds.her brain still sharp

  • @chris-ci7ch
    @chris-ci7ch Год назад +18

    I took a statin for about a year it hurt all of my muscles. I was always in pain. I did become diabetic and I went off statin.

    • @wilsont1010
      @wilsont1010 Год назад +1

      Not surprising. God has left the building long ago.

  • @ausmiku
    @ausmiku Год назад +23

    Cholesterol and LDL are red herrings. Insulin resistance (eg type 2 diabetes) is at the critical stage for many risk factors, not just cardio events. I read somewhere that arterial damage occurs very often near vessel junctions where blood flow eddies happen (my brother has 2 stents at exactly these points). The endothelium is not the first line of defence of blood vessels. It is the glycocalyx, the strands of proteins lining the endothelium. It has biochemical as well as biomechanical properties (hence the eddy theory). It is thought that high blood glucose levels slowly reduces the thickness of glycocalyx, which needs time to repair itself. A constant high carb diet (i.e.blood glucose) can completely remove the glycocalyx and allow the endothelium to be damaged. The blood always wants to clear insulin which, oddly enough, does the damage.

    • @Calibrad
      @Calibrad Год назад +1

      Plant based diets are high carb and people reverse everything on that 🤷‍♂️

    • @mitchaoc
      @mitchaoc Год назад

      ApoB is the most accurate predictor of CVD. If it’s high you should be worried. This Quack’s carnivore diet might be great for losing weight, but not for a healthy heart.

    • @hektor6766
      @hektor6766 Год назад +7

      @@Calibrad "reverse everything" doesn't mean anything. It is pure vegan-babble. Plant-based diets are high carb, so they maintain high blood-glucose and insulin levels. That's chemistry and endocrinology, not epidemiology or mythology.

  • @bazs7669
    @bazs7669 11 месяцев назад +7

    Very informative and excellent explanation from Dr Saladino. Thank you,

  • @DeweyDEWMANBrown875
    @DeweyDEWMANBrown875 3 месяца назад +2

    Absolutely. Unequivocally. Outstanding. Thank you!! Presented in common sense manner. Understandable. Perfect.

  • @forsdykemontague1017
    @forsdykemontague1017 Год назад +9

    There are two types of LDL one of which is CVD neutral and the other, Oxidised VLDL which can end up in the arterial walls and therefore increased risk of CVD according to Dr Rob Lustig.

  • @fiddlerJohn
    @fiddlerJohn Год назад +10

    Wow! I think I understood most of what Dr. Paul Saladino said. Thanks

  • @catb4918
    @catb4918 Год назад +20

    Dr. Paul you were excellent in this episode I'll be passing this along to ppl who need to hear this. Thank you!

  • @wesdale1753
    @wesdale1753 4 месяца назад +34

    According to the doctor my LDL was high. Because of that l was told that l need to be tested for prostate cancer, TB, and bone disease...
    I was referred to a Urologist that referred me to go for bone scanning. There l was bombarded with X Ray for 1 hour. Since then l have become more sick, symptoms that l never had all my life. I am in my 70's, l dont drink, don't smoke, don't do drugs. I eat healthy, l work out.
    So once you are in their hands they'll extract every ounce of juice from you in order to charge the Medicare System the maximum possible.
    (my case)

    • @obicat
      @obicat 4 месяца назад

      I think you're right. The docs push big Pharma's latest discovery which probably tortured and killed a lot of innocent animals to get whatever results they got, which often turn out to have awful side effects for humans...no one wants to take the time to look at each patient individually...just push pills at you. Individual research is mandatory.

  • @kimfinnegan5001
    @kimfinnegan5001 11 дней назад +1

    That was hands down the best explaination of choesterol I have ever heard and I've heard a LOT!!!

  • @richardmoeller3143
    @richardmoeller3143 Год назад +16

    One more thing I have known someone who was taking a statin for years and their CAC score was 2000 so how did happen if statins prevent artery disease!

  • @tjteknik1
    @tjteknik1 Год назад +11

    I was put on statins by my doctor after bloodwork showing high LDL and HDL, as well as high Glucose. But after reading up and viewing stuff about statins (and some strange side effects that I think is related) I'm going to quit that. At the time (and still) I was fasting regularly and eating an 80% carnivore diet (basically keto). From what I understand, fasting and keto will raise those cholesterols and sometimes the Glucose as well. The thing is... those blood results were the first I've ever had, so no-one knows if they were that high when I was younger. As per usual some doctors just look at things they've learned through med-school and have no clue.

    • @tabithachaparro5915
      @tabithachaparro5915 Месяц назад

      Being on a keto diet can mess up a fasting glucose number. Research that for sure.

  • @maryk6407
    @maryk6407 Год назад +46

    Thank-you! Although I knew that cholesterol was only a correlate of atherosclerosis, I let a doctor stress me out over an excellent metabolic panel, but two markers that were high: LDL and ApoB. He freaked and really, I let his reaction scare the bejesus out of me. It is now a month later and I’m fine again and continuing to protect my liver and lose weight on my keto/carno/intermittent fasting regime. However, listening to Dr. Saladino brought me all the way down off of the cholesterol-spooking ledge.

    • @locybapsi174
      @locybapsi174 Год назад +9

      ApoB is the most important risk factor for cardiovascular disease so if it's high you should be worried.

    • @user-kh8bp6ue8y
      @user-kh8bp6ue8y Год назад +1

      Fasting raises liver enzymes. I just learned this.. but does have many benefits

    • @maryk6407
      @maryk6407 Год назад

      My liver enzymes are now in the teens and I have been intermittent fasting since December 2022. I try to give my liver at least 10 hours of rest from eating. I’m lucky, because I have never been hypoglycemic.@@user-kh8bp6ue8y

    • @maryk6407
      @maryk6407 Год назад

      I appreciate that this can be a risk factor. However, Insulin resistance is the number 1 cause of cardiovascular disease. The high cholesterols are a distant risk after smoking, obesity, and several others. I have a family history of obese, smoking late 80, 90, and 100-plus-year olds. I only know incidentally of the cholesterol levels of a couple and they were higher than me. @@locybapsi174

    • @gloriamaryhaywood2217
      @gloriamaryhaywood2217 Год назад +2

      Not a dang thing to be concerned about,.. much less scared silly over!! Stick with Keto and fasting and you will be verrry healthy and feel absolutely
      Greattttt!!!😎

  • @dragoclarke9497
    @dragoclarke9497 2 месяца назад +3

    Extremely well presented video. Great to see a knowledgeable physician questioning the "accepted" view and explain why it is wrong.

  • @dominicdavison8590
    @dominicdavison8590 2 месяца назад +3

    My Father had a triple bypass at 44, my brother had a heart attack at 50 never smoked, not overweight, has high Cholesterol, I've recently being diagnosed with CVD, never smoked, not overweight. no diabetes but have had high cholesterol for years, without treating it. Deeply regret not getting it checked younger. High LDL is without question a major cause of heart disease.

  • @escalade8759
    @escalade8759 11 месяцев назад +13

    Awesome content Doc! Thanks! I learned the basics of this a while back, but I have never heard anyone come close to this explanation. My cholesterol has always been high, but so is my HDL. My primary doctor is always suggesting a staten drug for me, but that is not happening!❤ Just an update! I have dropped over 20 pounds since I last saw the doctor, I'm certain my numbers to include cholesterol is going to blow him away. Back to my 40 year old wait 20 years later. No drugs needed!

  • @SearlesHernandez
    @SearlesHernandez Год назад +18

    I consulted my doctor and he recommended I go on a statin as my ApoB is 90 and Lp(a) is 99. The rest of my labs: Total Cholesterol: 201, LDL: 118, HDL: 75, Trigs: 45, VLDL: 8, Tot/HDL ratio: 2.68, LDL/HDL ratio: 1.60. 💚🤙

    • @Zumbamom
      @Zumbamom Год назад +7

      My LDL is 300 total 435
      My dr freaked out! I dont care.
      I am so healthy.

    • @tpharo34
      @tpharo34 Год назад +1

      Wow that’s incredible! Today mine was 313/ LDL 235 and she freaked and put me on a statin and begged me to take it.

    • @khurshidawan164
      @khurshidawan164 Год назад +1

      TG / HDL is most predictive of Insulin Resistance.
      In your case TG/HDL ( 45 / 75 ) is very good.

    • @narcee1550
      @narcee1550 8 месяцев назад

      Your panel looks great!

  • @jpr42100
    @jpr42100 11 месяцев назад +11

    Finally, someone who understands what coronary artery disease is. Thank you.

  • @HeroicCoachingwithDan
    @HeroicCoachingwithDan 6 месяцев назад +2

    Some great points Paul is laying out as well as setting the notion that there are some nuances that need to be expressed. For example: A fasting insulin doesn't in and of itself measure for insulin 'sensitivity'. There is no blood test for insulin sensitivity. it is an educated guess or assumption. My fasting insulin and C-peptide are considered optimal, my lastest blood tests: Triglycerides: 110, HDL 82 (Tri/HDL ratio -1.3 supposidley optimal), Fasting Glucose 100 pre/pre diabetes, Ha1c - 6 - pre diabeties, C-peptide 1.6 optimal, Fasting Insulin - 2.9 optimal, and so on. You can see that I have insulin resistance or some metabolic dysregulation and inflexiblity. I am sharing this to give you a heads up that people need to work with a seasoned and expereinced functional metabolic practitioner to successfully assess and guide an individual towards optimal metabolic flexibilty. A much more valuable assessment would consider a fasting glucose tolerance assessment with insulin draw at each stage of the 2 hour assessment and instead of using the 75grams of pure glucose, one should consider using real food that would be their worst case senerio like a bagel with butter and cream cheese, or a 16 ounce fruit smoothie, or some real food carbohydrate source that mimics real life senerio rather than a lab rat assessment. Awesome -go get it. Dan Hegerich, 6x Cancer Survivor, Post Cast Host, Heroic Performance Life Coach.

  • @MerilynnQuirk
    @MerilynnQuirk 4 месяца назад +5

    I listened to this just prior to going to my doctor to review my bloodwork results. Everything this doctor said would happen happened. Once I asked my doctor about my metabolic health and the correlation between that and ldl levels, the conversation changed and statins were no longer recommended. We need to educate ourselves about this in order to have a meaningful discussion with our doctors. Great discussion here! Thanks!

  • @HealthExplained-wh2tb
    @HealthExplained-wh2tb 8 месяцев назад +5

    As a GP in Australia, Some guy sued me because he had a heart attack. His argument was that one number on the lipids panel was out of range ten years prior, so it was all my fault. My medicolegal team grilled me as though I should have put him on a statin. This illustrates the defensiveness that permeates Australian healthcare. No doubt it is similar in the USA. Luckily, specialist medical opinion supported me.

  • @lorettacaputo6997
    @lorettacaputo6997 10 месяцев назад +4

    The glycated lipoproteins is the culprit involved in the inflammation causing the artherosclerosis plaque. This is the link between metabolic dysfunction involving glucose metabolism and heart disease. High fat consumption is not the killer, it is the high fat consumption and high refined carbohydrates. This is the recipe for chronic disease. Low carb / ketogenic diet is the key.

  • @isdiseasehereditary6933
    @isdiseasehereditary6933 7 месяцев назад +3

    BRILLIANT explanation by Saladino!!

  • @DaY-lp1hf
    @DaY-lp1hf 7 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you so much Dr. Saladino for a brilliant commentary. My Dr. had me in panic mode saying my cholesterol is too high with a non fasting blood test. And wanted to out me on a statin which I refused. I said i would lower it with an even healthier diet and exercise even more. My total cholesterol was 272. I feel very good tho. I think mostly non fasting gave a higher reading. i am physically fit and do not want muscle aches from any stations. I do not like any drugs.

  • @mowthpeece1
    @mowthpeece1 Месяц назад +1

    This is reassuring. Some of us are hyperresponders and LDL goes very high. It's good to know that the only concern should be avoiding oxidation. Thank you for having him on. He's a wealth of information.

  • @michaelszczys8316
    @michaelszczys8316 10 месяцев назад +13

    My doctor had me on large amounts of statins because my cholesterol was a bit high.
    Then i started eating vitamin K2 and also worked at getting my body into ' fat burning ' mode.
    I also stopped taking the statins.
    The fat burning worked and i lost 40 lbs. I feel the vitamin K2 worked as well as i could tell of increased blood flow in certain areas of my body. Then i got another blood check and it showed much higher cholesterol in my blood. I learned that cholesterol is mostly involved in moving fat around in your body so i figured it to be high because it was busy moving all that fat around, mostly out.
    I told my doctor about eating vitamin K2 and she asked " why would i want to take a blood thinner and blood thickener at the same time?"
    Apparently that is the way they view vitamin K2.
    I also asked about one of those calcium scans and she thought i was crazy.

    • @juliespiteri3625
      @juliespiteri3625 9 месяцев назад +1

      Hi there, can I ask how you put your body into fat burning mode?

    • @michaelszczys8316
      @michaelszczys8316 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@juliespiteri3625 have some days where you eat only ' fat ' like eggs and meat with absolutely nothing else except maybe salt on the meat.
      Drink only water.
      I believe they call it the ' keto ' diet but I don't know as I see ' keto ' on all sorts of things that would just ruin it.
      Some people have to eat like that for a week, I got it to kick in before by just eating that way on the weekends.
      Fasting for serious amounts of time helps too, like 30 to 40 hours, nothing but water.

    • @juliespiteri3625
      @juliespiteri3625 9 месяцев назад +3

      @michaelszczys8316 Thank you for the info, Michael. Much appreciated.

    • @michaelszczys8316
      @michaelszczys8316 9 месяцев назад +4

      Watch some of thr video seminars from
      Dr. John Whitcomb on different issues such as vitamins , he is very informative.

  • @alanhewitt8258
    @alanhewitt8258 11 месяцев назад +7

    Loved this broadcast tons of good information for the layman.20 years ago I was told I needed statin I refused based on the grounds that statin is a con (my words) the doctor was pissed off when I told him so,I am now 82yrs and my cholesterol is the same as the first time.(p.s.)I would not touch canola oil it has had the crap processed out it and it is a GMO.

  • @guerino8945
    @guerino8945 Год назад +125

    No such thing as "Good or Bad" cholesterol. Cholesterol is Cholesterol. It's your body's best friend.

    • @bige2012
      @bige2012 Год назад +1

      Wouldn’t say it’s “best friend” but not enemy

    • @judymiller5154
      @judymiller5154 Год назад +10

      damaged/oxidized LDL is not good

    • @BSnydr
      @BSnydr Год назад +4

      I have a lot of best friends

    • @wasteddude
      @wasteddude Год назад

      ​@@judymiller5154exactly.

    • @zelowatch30
      @zelowatch30 Год назад +4

      Yes plus you need it if you want your vitamin D to work.

  • @nevastrong2850
    @nevastrong2850 11 месяцев назад +9

    7:11 insulin sensitivity & metabolic health are the magic words here. Great explanation!

  • @doctorsnutritiontv
    @doctorsnutritiontv 6 месяцев назад +3

    Dr Saladino has done a great job of explaining the issues of cholesterol. I totally agree that one of the best predictors of impending atherosclerosis formation and growth is the oxidized LDL. On any evaluation testing for cardiovascular disease I do a fasting lipid panel, and I prefer the NMR Lipoprofile as it provides much more information about the lipids, as well as a fasting insulin and an oxidized LDL. With this we have a much better picture of the patient's health status. Great job guys. JF

  • @psabrsula
    @psabrsula Год назад +7

    Take all cooking oils like corn, canola, out of the diet. Start using extra virgin olive oil and avocado oil instead. Mediterranean diet for oils.

  • @dountoothers
    @dountoothers 9 месяцев назад +17

    Not worried about cholesterol and not worried about smoking either. Full carnivore now nine months - and one pack a day smoker. No IBS, no anxiety/ depression, lots of energy and no lesions on my lungs or calcium plaques in my arteries. The medical establishment lies to us about nearly everything. Do your own research!!!! Thank you, Dr. Saladino!!

  • @sharondavis3897
    @sharondavis3897 10 месяцев назад +35

    My Mom always had very high blood pressure. She lived to be 100 in good health.😊

    • @missourihoney
      @missourihoney 10 месяцев назад +3

      Wow that’s good to know …

    • @kamalhwail2592
      @kamalhwail2592 9 месяцев назад +3

      Not high blood pressure, we are refering to cholesterol. Dont confuse the two

    • @badams118
      @badams118 9 месяцев назад +1

      Why do people keep using anecdotes to draw broad conclusions about health metrics? You understand that cherry picking a single outlier tells you essentially nothing about something like the health effects of high blood pressure or LDL levels?

  • @Silerlonewolf1970
    @Silerlonewolf1970 10 месяцев назад +1

    I'm blown away with this educational video of honest Intel. Wow 😮thank you guys

  • @EunkyungYoo
    @EunkyungYoo 10 месяцев назад +2

    this is really enlightening. I never knew how to interpret the bloodvalues like hdl, triglyceride,ldl and more importantly the relationship between them because my doctor also always focused on the simple value without trying to see the whole picture. thank you for sharing this knowledge. I always have kept a healthy lifestyle and was wondering why my total cholesterol value has been so high. I now know i need to look deeper and see the relationship between hdl and triglyceride, which is indicator of overall metabolic health.

  • @dianehoote8829
    @dianehoote8829 Год назад +5

    we’ll my parents both have heart disease and my mom just died from congestive heart failure and so does my dad who is still alive and my numbers were the highest ever so i’m back on statin and changing my diet to the mediterranean diet so i’ll be checking again in three months to see the changes how can you tell me that not to worry ?

  • @TiddlesParadiddles
    @TiddlesParadiddles Год назад +32

    Happy to see Dr. Paul explaining such a nuanced issue. I would love for him to explain what's relative and pertinent in a lipid panel for a type 1 diabetic.

  • @matkagrogan5251
    @matkagrogan5251 Год назад +62

    Great explanation of very complex issue. I wish all the doctors could explain the basic mechanisms of any chronic disease. Obviously, it is easier and more profitable for them just to put patients on pills. "Corruption in contemporary medicine", oh that book would have 450 trillion pages :)

    • @wilsont1010
      @wilsont1010 Год назад +3

      Get a good doctor, dont throw your money away and you will not be confused. Use TRG/HDL which is the proper health marker.

    • @Joy-fx4ee
      @Joy-fx4ee Год назад

      Yeah it seems like nowadays they just give you pills here pills there, no explanation. Instead of fixing the underlying condition all they do is temporary fix. It’s all money driven now. Cause if they actually fix you, you will stop going back to clinics/hospitals.

    • @cyberfunk3793
      @cyberfunk3793 Год назад

      @@wilsont1010No it's not. The indicator for heart disease is ApoB which correlates well with LDL in most people (75%).

    • @dwights1464
      @dwights1464 Год назад +2

      When ApoB does not correlate with LDL cholesterol, ApoB is the marker to watch. Risk follows ApoB more closely than LDL cholesterol. HDL cholesterol is a weak predictor of cardiovascular health so ratios based on it are much less than ideal.

  • @motivationmafia.
    @motivationmafia. 9 месяцев назад +2

    Superb explaination to subtle concepts which our health care providers never give or even try.

  • @mikew4019
    @mikew4019 11 месяцев назад +2

    My blood work all looked great in my latest blood panel except my cholesterol. This is great info in my approach to better balance my HDL and LDL. Thanks for asking the question, young Christopher Walken.

  • @chremis
    @chremis Год назад +7

    very good explanation, many thanks, I have been on a low carb, high fat, regime for a while now, everything good, all markers ideal/normal, weight well down from overweight to normal, everything good apart from "high LDL and total Cholesterol" numbers. I am not quite, LMHR, as my numbers are not so extreme, but, has been termed SHR (Standard Hyper Responder), thanks, Dave Feldman, so, its good to hear as many people as possible downplay LDL as a risk marker for otherwise healthy people, oh, I'm Insulin Sensitive also, according to my poor man's lipid measure, triglycerides/HDL ratio, thanks again

  • @t10mcg
    @t10mcg Год назад +5

    Isn’t one way you can know if your LDL is “bad” related to the particle size? If you have small dense LDL verses large and fluffy you are more at risk for artery damage.

  • @ИлянаА
    @ИлянаА Год назад +4

    oh wow, that's exactly my case. LDL increases, but TC is at the lowest of the standard, HDL is perfect, insulin is perfect. Doctor prescribed statins and a bunch of other drugs for liver. Why I asked myself? I checked these markers like the speaker mentioned. I am a perfect healthy person!!!

  • @luannefarmer
    @luannefarmer 5 месяцев назад +22

    My grandfather never went to a doctor, worked hard physically from the age of 8 , smoked from the age of 8
    Had home grown vegetables ( which he grew)and red meat every night washed down with a bottle of dark brown beer. In his 40s he jumped out a burning building window and broke both his ankles. His only stint in hospital ( which he swore he would never do to again, and didn’t) He lived till 86 . Died of a bad cold turning to pneumonia . Smoked roll ups since 8 years old. Didn’t trust doctors or banks since the 29 crash!

  • @nowayout8773
    @nowayout8773 4 месяца назад +1

    But on a note. I raised my HDL from 28 to 60. Triglycerides down to 79. Triglycerides were around 300. My liver numbers are awesome.
    I cut safflower and all seed oils. I use ghee, butter, lard and I cut pasta, rice, and bread for a few weeks and my metabolism became flexible. I didn't bonk anymore. I'm 58. My doctor knows what I am doing but freaked out at my high LDL. I explained the HDL triglycerides ratios and having LDL high is good for the immune system.
    She agreed. The blood test of course gets flagged when LDL is high. She agreed and knows about keto and insulin resistance. The stiffness in my elbows cleared up and my memory is really good.
    I am not overweight at all. But I was insulin resistant. It was obvious. And I reveresed it. I can enjoy sweets occasionally, too. The worst offender us safflower oil. I believe it lowered my HDL to 28 and a health book recommended to use it because it didn't have a strange smell like canola.

  • @Eric-io4pe
    @Eric-io4pe Год назад +39

    What Dr. Saladino says is so critical. My uncle was killed by wrongly prescribed statins. Instead of fixing his metabolic health, the drs. kept him on statins until his musculature deteriorated to the point of him being bed ridden and eventually dying a lingering death in a hospital.

    • @lindalambert8727
      @lindalambert8727 9 месяцев назад +5

      A friend of mine ended up in a wheel chair on statins.

    • @Ex_877
      @Ex_877 8 месяцев назад +5

      Drs. don't care about your health. They care about making their pharmaceutical funders happy.

    • @wgg6188
      @wgg6188 8 месяцев назад +1

      Statins have been implicated as a cause of cancer…

    • @donnarichardson7214
      @donnarichardson7214 8 месяцев назад

      @@Ex_877 They also care about not getting sued, and if the insurers and the corporation controlling their medical practice tells them to prescribe or not prescribe X due to statistical risk, they seldom resist for the nuanced good of the individual. Or even try to see the individual profile. That was implicit in this doctor's talk.

  • @kschmidt1967
    @kschmidt1967 Год назад +7

    I asked my doctor to do the HOMA-IR blood test and she knew nothing about it. She said she only orders blood tests she knows how to read. That’s weak since ranges are provided, I can read that. Ugh

    • @hektor6766
      @hektor6766 Год назад

      Wow. Just...wow.

    • @alcyone-rising
      @alcyone-rising 9 месяцев назад +1

      thats totally lame and unprofessional. Im so sorry!

  • @Nolan-fz3co
    @Nolan-fz3co Год назад +8

    What if high cholesterol runs in the family. Familial hypercholesterolemia? Any studies on us?

    • @LakerLife
      @LakerLife Год назад +1

      That depends if it’s hetero or homo zygous form.
      It depends how high your cholesterol is

    • @GameAlready
      @GameAlready Год назад

      Please if you have real concerns, DO NOT FOLLOW PAUL. His medical field is Psychiatry, he weaves fallacy into narrative to support his carnivore diet, seek a Cardiologists advice.

    • @topfingers
      @topfingers 10 месяцев назад

      See Dr. David Diamond, who has examined loads of research papers on that very subject. I watched Dr. Ken Berry's discussion with him (on RUclips) and it was very informative.

  • @carliecotton9219
    @carliecotton9219 5 месяцев назад +1

    This is such a great awakening ❤️💙

  • @tonyheath5747
    @tonyheath5747 4 месяца назад +1

    Wow Dr Saladino,,,you are nothing short of a genius 👏👏👏

  • @BradMangas
    @BradMangas 11 месяцев назад +10

    Dr. Saladino just explained these issues in a very understandable way. Thank you for this video.

  • @sharkierich58
    @sharkierich58 5 месяцев назад +3

    Great discussion - Dr. Saladino, I'd love to hear you discuss this (especially LDL and APoB) with Peter Attia, who has many podcasts on the dangers of high LDL and APoB. You two are seemingly polar opposites, which adds to my confusion.

    • @bonniemartin4232
      @bonniemartin4232 15 дней назад

      My understanding is that ApoB is very indicative of CVD and the blood test that should be done. Dr. Gil of Nutrition made Simple did a video on this and I trust him out of all the ones I've listened to for sound advice that is evidenced based. I'm having it done tomorrow just to see though my numbers aren't too bad. I'm also getting Lp(a) done in a couple of days.

  • @7ammit
    @7ammit Год назад +9

    This puts my mind at rest and is. to my way of thinking, a very plausable argument. My docter didn't even know that one can test for insulin. Thanks Paul

  • @syd5604
    @syd5604 11 месяцев назад +2

    i’ve gotten blood work every 6 months for 2-3yrs because i have adhd & take adderall, i don’t do fasting blood work and i still haven’t qualified for diabetes. the only things that have come up are
    - 1 time i had low vitamin d
    - last time i had a higher LDL but my dr said my HDL was extremely high and my ratio was perfect so it wasn’t really of concern but said we’d continue watching it.
    i have blood work today so i’m hoping all goes well lol
    i’ve been really broke since the economy has been in the toilet so i haven’t been able to make my normal healthy meals. i don’t eat fast food and i try not to make mac n cheese, ramen, frozen food, etc but it’s been hard. i know for a fact that my change in diet is why my LDL went up because that’s the only thing that has changed.