Back On Track Together
Good Fats - Bad Fats
Understanding Dietary Fats
Replacing the unhealthy fats in your diet with a healthy amount of nutritional fats can help lower high cholesterol and still allow you to enjoy your food.
By Diana Rodriguez Medically reviewed by Christine Wilmsen Craig, MD
You don't have to eliminate all dietary fats to stay to stay heart healthy. In fact, good fat can reduce high cholesterol and improve your ticker. The key? Knowing which dietary fats are which, and how to replace bad fat with good fat.
High Cholesterol Alert: The Bad Fats
High Cholesterol Alert: The Good Fats
High Cholesterol Alert: Making Changes to Your Diet
It's not just about what you eat. How you cook matters, too. If you have high cholesterol, make these smart and delicious changes to your meals to satisfy your heart and your appetite.
High Cholesterol Alert: Know Your Limits
The American Heart Association recommends that less than 7 percent of your daily calorie intake be from saturated fat, with less than 1 percent coming from trans fats. And even good fat can be harmful if not monitored — you can't just eat all you want. Total fat consumption each day should be between 25 to 35 percent of your total daily caloric intake or lower.
Cholesterol intake should be less than 300 milligrams per day for people with healthy cholesterol levels. But for those with high cholesterol, less than 200 milligrams of cholesterol should be your daily limit.
If you have high cholesterol, start reading labels — it's the only way you'll ever know what you're eating. Avoid saturated and trans fats as much as possible because your body doesn't need them, and experiment with healthy recipes and exciting new flavors to satisfy your taste buds as you lower your cholesterol.
HW:330 - GW:150 - MW:118-125
RW:190 - CW:130
IMO - these are old believes. Recently - many natural docs and nutritionist are start telling us that the most natural fats - the best for the body.
So skip the oils- highly processed, get the butter, the coconut oil, the eggs and the full fat items. And skip the oils, and highly processed foods. The carbs, and grains and the high insulin level those food creates in our body is what may be causing the cholesterol problem.
But then - they are just experiments that they try to impose on so many people....
As natural as you can (flax seeds, not the oils, walnuts not not oil, etc) and your body can process that. But processed food - not so much.
BTW: most vegetable oils gets rancid so fast that is close to impossible to have good, high quality oils. The fiber and the other elements in whole foods is what makes the oils good - when consumed as whole. The moment the industry tries to "modify the food" the breakdown process and oxidation begins. Making the oils more toxic that the so called "bad fats".
Also - IMO - the so called " bad fats" are making us full longer, and limit the hunger and cravings.
Hala. RNY 5/14/2008; Happy At Goal =HAG
"I can eat or do anything I want to - as long as I am willing to deal with the consequences"
"Failure is not falling down, It is not getting up once you fell... So pick yourself up, dust yourself off, and start all over again...."