Myths about high cholesterol

Libra Girl

Electoral Member
Feb 27, 2006
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The Real Truth About Cholesterol
"Statin Drugs Actually Increase Heart Disease"
Statin drug manufactures claim their drugs lower cholesterol and reduce the risk of heart disease. Doctor Ron Rosedale, MD shows the opposite to be true.
Indeed, low cholesterol levels have been shown to worsen patients with congestive heart failure, a life-threatening condition where the heart becomes too weak to effectively pump blood. Statin drugs have been shown to also cause nerve damage and to greatly impair memory. One reason that Statin drugs have these various serious side effects is that they work by inhibiting a vital enzyme that manufactures cholesterol in the liver. However, the same enzyme is used to manufacture coenzyme Q10, which is a biochemical needed to transfer energy from food to our cells to be used for the work of staying alive and healthy.
Statin drugs are known to inhibit our very important production of coenzyme Q10. Importantly, while many cardiologists insist that lowering cholesterol is correlated with a reduction in the risk of heart attacks; few can say that there is a reduction in the risk of mortality (death). That has been much harder to show. In other words it has never been conclusively shown that lowering cholesterol saves lives. In fact, several large studies have shown that lowering cholesterol into the range currently recommended is correlated with an increased risk of dying, especially of cancer. For more click on Ron Rosedale, MD
Dr. David Williams
The disclaimers from the Drug Companies about their Statin drugs show the side affects are very, very dangerous. The benefits cholesterol drugs provide have never been shown to be of much value and their cost is astronomical.
So you can stop trying to change your cholesterol, studies prove beyond a doubt, cholesterol doesn't cause heart disease and it won't stop a heart attack. The majority of people that have heart attacks have normal cholesterol levels.
http://www.cholesterolwarning.com/?gclid=CLiLh4qc1YsCFQnmlAodRD_TWg
Dangers of Statin Drugs: What You Haven’t Been Told About Popular Cholesterol-Lowering Medicines
By Sally Fallon and Mary G. Enig, PhD
Hypercholesterolemia is the health issue of the 21st century. It is actually an invented disease, a "problem" that emerged when health professionals learned how to measure cholesterol levels in the blood. High cholesterol exhibits no outward signs--unlike other conditions of the blood, such as diabetes or anemia, diseases that manifest telltale symptoms like thirst or weakness--hypercholesterolemia requires the services of a physician to detect its presence. Many people who feel perfectly healthy suffer from high cholesterol--in fact, feeling good is actually a symptom of high cholesterol!
Doctors who treat this new disease must first convince their patients that they are sick and need to take one or more expensive drugs for the rest of their lives, drugs that require regular checkups and blood tests. But such doctors do not work in a vacuum--their efforts to convert healthy people into patients are bolstered by the full weight of the US government, the media and the medical establishment, agencies that have worked in concert to disseminate the cholesterol dogma and convince the population that high cholesterol is the forerunner of heart disease and possibly other diseases as well.
Who suffers from hypercholesterolemia? Peruse the medical literature of 25 or 30 years ago and you’ll get the following answer: any middle-aged man whose cholesterol is over 240 with other risk factors, such as smoking or overweight. After the Cholesterol Consensus Conference in 1984, the parameters changed; anyone (male or female) with cholesterol over 200 could receive the dreaded diagnosis and a prescription for pills. Recently that number has been moved down to 180. If you have had a heart attack, you get to take cholesterol-lowering medicines even if your cholesterol is already very low--after all, you have committed the sin of having a heart attack so your cholesterol must therefore be too high. The penance is a lifetime of cholesterol-lowering medications along with a boring lowfat diet. But why wait until you have a heart attack? Since we all labor under the stigma of original sin, we are all candidates for treatment. Current edicts stipulate cholesterol testing and treatment for young adults and even children.
The drugs that doctors use to treat the new disease are called statins--sold under a variety of names including Lipitor (atorvastatin), Zocor (simvastatin), Mevacor (lovastatin) and Pravachol (pravastatin).
http://www.westonaprice.org/moderndiseases/statin.html
 

Dexter Sinister

Unspecified Specialist
Oct 1, 2004
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I'd be very suspicious of that. That link in the OP goes to the web site of a Dr. Joseph Mercola, who's been in trouble with the FDA before for making illegal and unsubstantiated claims about the products and services he sells through his web site and his practice. Quackwatch doesn't have good things to say about him.
 

Libra Girl

Electoral Member
Feb 27, 2006
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I'd be very suspicious of that. That link in the OP goes to the web site of a Dr. Joseph Mercola, who's been in trouble with the FDA before for making illegal and unsubstantiated claims about the products and services he sells through his web site and his practice. Quackwatch doesn't have good things to say about him.
Well, that may be DS, but many other Practitioners and Scientists are concluding similar findings. I recently watched a documentary about it which was extremely interesting. Like everything else, science facts and findings evolve and renew data.
 

Dexter Sinister

Unspecified Specialist
Oct 1, 2004
10,168
536
113
Regina, SK
Well, that may be DS, but many other Practitioners and Scientists are concluding similar findings. I recently watched a documentary about it which was extremely interesting. Like everything else, science facts and findings evolve and renew data.
I don't think there's any "may be" about it, Dr. Mercola has all the signs of quackery about him. There are legitimate studies that suggest the real issue is inflammation, not cholesterol as such, but the bad fats that raise cholesterol levels also produce inflammation. The link is not yet clear. Dr. Mercola's conclusions aren't justified by the evidence he presents. He's also against immunization and flouridation of water, or at least there are essays on the site by others that argue in favour of those positions, which presumably means Mercola approves of them, and those are public health measures whose efficacy has been repeatedly proven beyond any reasonable doubt. Nothing on that site can be trusted.
 

Libra Girl

Electoral Member
Feb 27, 2006
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Nothing on that site can be trusted.
I understand that, and when I posted the link I had no knowledge of this man's reputation. But there were three other links, and a host more that can be found by googling, all saying the same thing. Also, I hardly think that the data shown in the link that L Gilbert supplied from Harvard no less, could be termed as 'quackery.'