Blog Archive

May 2012 (3)
April 2012 (4)
March 2012 (5)
February 2012 (4)
January 2012 (3)
December 2011 (5)
November 2011 (4)
October 2011 (5)
September 2011 (4)
August 2011 (4)
July 2011 (4)
June 2011 (4)

personal training studio

Severna Park
Market Center
485 Ritchie Hwy, Ste 203
Severna Park, MD   21146
(410) 647-8974
Map

Hours of Operation

By Appointment Only
6 a.m. to 9 p.m. (Monday - Friday)
6 a.m. to 3 p.m. (Saturday)

Featured Downloads

Follow us on:

Blog

Bookmark and Share

Researchers Say Nuts to Low-Fat Diet Alone

Posted By: RealAge on 11/13/2011

Need to get your LDL cholesterol down (maybe way down) but your low-fat diet just isn't doing it? Try upping your intake of nuts, including soy nuts. Add a bowl of oatmeal or barley soup, some soy milk, and a little cholesterol-fighting bread spread. Done.

In a new study, people who ate a diet rich in these foods lowered their LDL cholesterol by at least 13% in just 6 months. The shocker: A comparison group that ate a diet low in saturated fat got only a 3% LDL reduction. Talk about surprises!

A One-Two Punch
Lesson learned: Cutting back on saturated fat, while a healthy idea in general, isn't enough to get your LDL where you want it. It's stubborn stuff. To smack it down, you need drugs or foods rich in three specific ingredients: plant sterols (phytosterols), soy protein, and sticky (viscous) fiber.

These ingredients may not sound all that tasty, but the foods they're in are! (Who doesn't love cashews?) They're also easy to find, quick and simple to eat, and so filling that they'll likely help you lose weight while lowering your LDL cholesterol. How effective are their ingredients? Other studies have found that diets rich in them could cut your LDL cholesterol as much as a low-dose statin drug. Yowza.

To knock down your cholesterol, here's how much to eat of what:

  • Mixed nuts (walnuts, almonds, peanuts, the works): a small handful a day. Nuts are full of protein, heart-healthy fats, and -- critical here -- LDL-fighting phytosterols.
  • Soy protein: two to three servings a day of soy milk, soy nuts, and tofu (total: 25 grams of protein). This alone can drop your LDL by 10%.
  • Spreads high in plant sterols (think Benecol, Take Control): about two tablespoons a day. That's enough to reduce your LDL levels 5% to 17%.
  • Sticky fiber: about two servings a day of oatmeal, barley, beans, lentils, or a psyillium supplement (Metamucil). The sticky, viscous fiber in these foods can lower LDL by 5% to 10%.

 

Share your thoughts, leave a comment!

Comments (0)

  • Nutrition Together Promo Button - Training and Nutrition
  • Free Personal Training Session