Heart disease becomes very common when it comes to aging. But getting one in young age is a thing no one wants to happen. Still, there are diseases that cause this and there are ways to prevent them. One of these diseases is a lipid disorder, the one that happens when you have high blood levels of Low Density Lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol or fats that are called Triglycerides, or both. Let’s see how to deal with it and how to lower triglycerides and cholesterol levels.
Cholesterol is a substance that found in blood naturally. It’s essential for a good health and helps to maintain it. But when its level becomes too high, cholesterol becomes a problem.
Cholesterol moves through veins in a lipoprotein, and there are two types of it: the good and the bad. The good cholesterol actually helps to remove another cholesterol (the ‘bad’ one) from the body. Its name is a High-Density Lipoprotein.
The bad cholesterol may build up in your veins and ‘choke’ them, which may make it more complicated for your blood to flow and cause coronary heart diseases. When your cholesterol balance changes, it leads to higher triglycerides — that’s how cholesterol and triglycerides relationship is working.
Triglycerides are a type of fat (or scientifically, Lipids) also found in your blood naturally. When you eat, you get calories and if you don’t use them right away, they convert into triglycerides and settle in your fat cells. Later hormones release these triglycerides so you get energy.
As you see, triglycerides are essential for your life. But if you get too many triglycerides (because you regularly burn much fewer calories than you get), you may be exposed to high triglycerides. The only way to determine cholesterol and triglycerides levels is to do a blood test.
As it was said, high ‘bad’ cholesterol levels may lead to heart attacks and strokes. And that’s the most important reason to lower cholesterol levels of all. When its level becomes too high, it starts to stock up in your body, forming lesions, particularly in blood vascular system, and it gets harder for the blood to get to your heart and back. Which mean, you become oxygen deficient and your tissues and organs don’t get enough blood. And when these lesions split, they can form clots, which causes thromboembolic disease, heart attacks, and strokes and can lead to a fatal outcome.
High triglycerides are also associated with heart diseases and other cardiovascular problems and always get higher while aging. It also may become a little higher in case of pregnancy. But in other cases, high level of triglycerides in your blood is a strong sign: something’s going wrong.
Higher triglycerides levels may highlight type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, pancreatitis, myocardial infarction, apoplectic attack, hepatitis, cirrhosis, atherosclerosis and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.
First of all, give up on the alcohol. All of it. That’s essential. Alcohol raises the triglycerides levels up to the sky, and very quickly. If you have a problem with high triglycerides, especially associated with your liver, just switch to water with lime.
There are two ways to lower cholesterol levels: the medical and the non-medical one. Both include dieting, but in the first case you’re helping yourself with some prescribes or over-the-counter medications, and in the second you are totally on yourself and you’re the only person responsible for lowering or progressive highering of your cholesterol levels.
If you decided to lower cholesterol levels naturally, here is how you can do this:
It’s a good thing if you noticed your increased triglycerides and cholesterol early, but in reality, it doesn’t happen often. Don’t worry, with the right dieting and sport you’ll be just fine. Revise your diet, talk to your doctor and start acting and eating right, and you’ll get rid of all these annoying numbers in your blood test. Chin up and good luck!
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