Understanding YOUR Cholesterol PROBLEMS Better

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In this episode, Dr. Steve breaks down the real causes of heart disease, debunking the myth that high LDL cholesterol is the culprit. He explains how small, dense LDL particles, chronic inflammation, and a diet high in processed carbs and sugars lead to arterial damage and plaque buildup. He also shares how to interpret your lipid panel, why the triglyceride-to-HDL ratio matters, and the importance of a nutrient-rich diet with animal fats and proteins for better health.
[00:01 - 09:17] Heart Attack Myths
High LDL cholesterol doesn't cause heart attacks—LDL transports cholesterol and triglycerides.
Excess carbs convert to glucose, leading to fat storage as triglycerides.
Overproduction of triglycerides creates harmful small, dense LDL particles.
Small, dense LDLs stay longer in the bloodstream, increasing risks.
Glycation from high glucose damages proteins and arteries.
[09:18 - 13:21] Carbs and Atherosclerosis
High-carb diets flood the bloodstream with glucose.
Excess glucose is stored as fat, overwhelming the liver.
Chronic high insulin leads to resistance and blood sugar issues.
Glycation damages LDLs and arterial walls.
Long-term high glucose drives atherosclerosis progression.
[13:22 - 21:10] The Inflammation Link to Heart Disease
Processed foods cause inflammation, damaging LDLs, and arteries.
High-carb diets weaken arterial lining, letting LDLs penetrate walls.
Free radicals from carbs worsen LDL and vessel damage.
Damaged LDLs form foam cells, narrowing arteries.
Foam cells cause clots and block blood flow, leading to heart attacks.
[21:11 - 25:37] What is Plaque and How it Forms
Plaque forms as a repair response, containing cholesterol, fatty acids, waste, calcium, and fibrin.
High glucose and small LDLs damage arteries, causing stiffness and tears.
LDLs deliver cholesterol to repair arterial walls, aiding the healing process.
High LDL isn’t the cause but a repair agent for damaged arteries.
Chronic damage from carbs and toxins keeps driving plaque buildup.
[25:38 - 34:00] Key Takeaways for Understanding Cardiovascular Health
A ratio below 2 (ideally 1) indicates fewer harmful small, dense LDLs.
High-carb diets increase harmful small LDL particles, while healthy fats boost protective HDL.
High LDL isn’t the cause of heart disease—small, dense LDL and inflammation are.
Statins lower cholesterol but may harm your body’s cells and overall health.
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Tweetable Quotes:
“This isn't cholesterol causing any of this. It's the small dense LDL particle that is causing all this damage. And it's small dense because of all the carbohydrates that you eat that get turned into triglycerides.” - Dr. Steve Hughlett
“It's not from the plaque breaking off that cause cardiovascular disease. It's from the foam cells causing the decrease in the lumen of blood vessels, which decreases blood flow plus clot formation.”  - Dr. Steve Hughlett
“The more glucose that attaches to the protein in red blood cells, the higher your A1c is and this is called glycation.” - Dr. Steve Hughlett
“It has been shown that when you eat carbohydrate, a high carbohydrate meal, you actually damage this glycocalyx and these velvet lining shrinks, shrivels up to practically nothing. And so they can't protect the arterial walls
anymore.” - Dr. Steve Hughlett

Disclaimer: The information provided on this channel/podcast is for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as a substitute for advice from your physician or other qualified healthcare provider. Always consult your doctor before making any changes to your diet, exercise routine, or medications.
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Excellent explanation! My husband took a heart attack in April at only 52 years old. Loves his carbs, alcohol, energy drinks and cigars. Tryclercides were 384 and HDL was 32 at the time of his heart attack - 90% blockage in his LAD.

KimLaCroix-sw
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Plenty of people talk about this in youtube but you are the only one I have come across so far who says the same thing twice (or maybe thrice!), which is absolutely what dummies like myself need. I find this all extremely complicated and appreicate repetition. It is shocking how we have all been so badly misinformed and misled over the years.

MrYorickJenkins
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Hi Steve ! Have you listened to the works of Tim Noakes ?

bengthyytiainen
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Thank you for making this video. Really good information and explanation of the processes

---RON----
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Tired of the looks I get from people after my 52 pound weight loss asking how I did it. "Dropped all sugar and went on a high fat high protein diet".

markwhite
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At whatever point - those carbs can also be converted into fructose... hello fatty liver and other internal organs

pointshealthcoaching
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If arterial wall damage had anything to do with cholesterol it would reek havoc on the entire vascular system and not just around the heart. Endothelial cells are damaged by arterial scurvy caused by a lack of vitamin C in our diets.

jeffevans
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My HbA1c is 6.6%,
fasting blood sugar 5.2 mmol/L and
urine sugar is negative.

Total cholesterol is 6.75 mmol/L,
HDL 1.05 mmol/L,
LDL 5.09 mmol /L,
Triglycerides 1.34 mmol/L and
chol/HDL ratio 6.4.

My blood pressure is 140/90.

johnng
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