Cholesterol and Saturated Fats
Tuesday, January 29th, 2008Cholesterol and Saturated Fats: Will the Real Culprit Please Stand Up?
Whats the connection between saturated fats and cholesterol?
It just figures, doesn’t it?
The really good-tasting foods also seem to be the ones with the highest cholesterol content. But before you fret over that information too much, did you know high cholesterol content doesn’t necessarily mean you have to avoid the foods you love?
No really, it’s true. It turns out the real problem isn’t a particular food’s cholesterol content as much as the amount of saturated fats a food contains.
Saturated fats actually cause our liver to go into production mode, generating the harmful type of cholesterol you’ve probably heard so much about.
Saturated fats are primarily found in animal products and are recognized by experts as agents in the elevation of your LDL cholesterol (the “bad” kind). The saturated fats are responsible for the triggering of LDL cholesterol production by your liver.
You don’t have to worry, however, about having enough saturated fats to fuel cholesterol production (and your body does need some cholesterol for cell repair and other things).
If you were to totally eliminate saturated fats from your diet, experts claim there would be absolutely no negative effect on your body, your body is able to produce all the cholesterol you will ever need without the aid of saturated fats.
In fact, the liver pumps into our blood four times the amount of cholesterol it receives from our food. Therefore, since saturated fats are responsible for stimulating cholesterol production in the liver, they are much more dangerous culprits than our poor dietary cholesterol.
So when you are at the grocery store and picking up food items be sure to read the label and look for saturated fats & trans fats as you want these to be as low as possible.
