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Bad Cholesterol not as bad as people think
Newswise, May 6, 2011 — COLLEGE STATION, May
4, 2011 – The so-called “bad cholesterol” –
low-density lipoprotein commonly called LDL
– may not be so bad after all, shows a Texas
A&M University study that casts new light on
the cholesterol debate, particularly among
adults who exercise.
Steve Riechman, a researcher in the
Department of Health and Kinesiology, says
the study reveals that LDL is not the evil
Darth Vader of health it has been made out
to be in recent years and that new attitudes
need to be adopted in regards to the
substance.
His work, with help from colleagues from the
University of Pittsburgh, Kent State
University, the Johns Hopkins Weight
Management Center and the Northern Ontario
School of Medicine, is published in the Journal
of Gerontology.
Riechman and colleagues examined 52 adults
from ages to 60 to 69 who were in generally
good health but not physically active, and
none of them were participating in a
training program. The study showed that
after fairly vigorous workouts, participants
who had gained the most muscle mass also had
the highest levels of LDL (bad) cholesterol,
“a very unexpected result and one that
surprised us.
“It shows that you do need a certain amount
of LDL to gain more muscle mass. There’s no
doubt you need both – the LDL and the HDL --
and the truth is, it (cholesterol) is all
good. You simply can’t remove all the ‘bad’
cholesterol from your body without serious
problems occurring.
Cholesterol is found in all humans and is a
type of fat around the body. A person’s
total cholesterol level is comprised of LDL
(low-density lipoprotein) and HDL
(high-density lipoprotein) cholesterol.
LDL is almost always referred to as the
“bad” cholesterol because it tends to build
up in the walls of arteries, causing a
slowing of the blood flow which often leads
to heart disease and heart attacks.
HDL, usually called the “good cholesterol,”
often helps remove cholesterol from
arteries.
“But here is where people tend to get things
wrong,” Riechman says.
“LDL serves a very useful purpose. It acts
as a warning sign that something is wrong
and it signals the body to these warning
signs. It does its job the way it is
supposed to.
“People often say, ‘I want to get rid of all
my bad (LDL) cholesterol,’ but the fact is,
if you did so, you would die,” the Texas A&M
professor adds. “Everyone needs a certain
amount of both LDL and HDL in their bodies.
We need to change this idea of LDL always
being the evil thing – we all need it, and
we need it to do its job.”
According to the American Heart Association,
about 36 million American adults have high
cholesterol levels.
“Our tissues need cholesterol, and LDL
delivers it,” he notes. “HDL, the good
cholesterol, cleans up after the repair is
done. And the more LDL you have in your
blood, the better you are able to build
muscle during resistance training.”
Riechman says the study could be helpful in
looking at a condition called sarcopenia,
which is muscle loss due to aging.
Previous studies show muscle is usually lost
at a rate of 5 percent per decade after the
age of 40, a huge concern since muscle mass
is the major determinant of physical
strength. After the age of 60, the
prevalence of moderate to severe sarcopenia
is found in about 65 percent of all men and
about 30 percent of all women, and it
accounts for more than $18 billion of health
care costs in the United States.
“The bottom line is that LDL – the bad
cholesterol – serves as a reminder that
something is wrong and we need to find out
what it is,” Riechman says.
“It gives us warning signs. Is smoking the
problem, is it diet, is it lack of exercise
that a person’s cholesterol is too high? It
plays a very useful role, does the job it
was intended to do, and we need to back off
by always calling it ‘bad’ cholesterol
because it is not totally bad.”
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