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Cholesterol, blood pressure, and heart disease. By Melissa Bess Nutrition and Health Education Specialist University of Missouri Extension FNEP STAFF TRAINING ONLY, DO NOT USE WITH FNEP PARTICIPANTS. 06/2007. Introduction. About cholesterol LDL vs. HDL Triglycerides Healthy levels
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Cholesterol, blood pressure, and heart disease By Melissa Bess Nutrition and Health Education Specialist University of Missouri Extension FNEP STAFF TRAINING ONLY, DO NOT USE WITH FNEP PARTICIPANTS 06/2007
Introduction • About cholesterol • LDL vs. HDL • Triglycerides • Healthy levels • Common misconceptions • What affects cholesterol? • Why does it matter? • Prevention of high cholesterol
Introduction (continued) • About blood pressure • Common misconceptions • Controlling high blood pressure • Heart disease risk factors
About cholesterol • Soft, fat-like, waxy substance • Bloodstream and cells • Needed for cell membranes and hormones and to make vitamin D • Comes from 2 sources • Body produces it (mostly genetic) in liver (1000 mg day) • Food sources (animal products – meats, poultry, fish, eggs, butter, whole milk, and cheese, not from plant sources) (100 – 500 mg day) • Foods with trans fats or saturated fats may cause the body to produce more cholesterol
About cholesterol • Must be transported through blood • Carriers are called lipoproteins • Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) • High-density lipoprotein (HDL) • Lipoprotein = protein + fat • LDL, more fat, less protein • HDL, more protein, less fat
LDL vs. HDL • LDL = “bad” • Too much can clog arteries by forming plaque • Atherosclerosis can cause heart attack or stroke
LDL vs. HDL • HDL = “good” • Tends to carry cholesterol away from arteries and back to liver • May also remove excess cholesterol from plaque in arteries, slows buildup
Triglycerides • Form of fat • Also made in body (body fat stored as triglyceride) and from food • Help transport dietary fat, metabolism • Trigger liver to make more cholesterol, rising LDL and total cholesterol
Healthy Levels • Total cholesterol • Optimal – under 200 mg/dL • Borderline high risk – 200-239 mg/dL • High risk – 240 mg/dL and up • LDL • Optimal – less than 100 mg/dL • Near/Above optimal – 100-129 mg/dL • Borderline high – 130- 159 mg/dL • High – 160 – 189 mg/dL • Very high – 190 mg/dL Source: National Cholesterol Education Program, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
Healthy Levels • HDL • Low - less than 40 mg/dL • High – above 60 mg/dL (may lower risk for heart disease) • Women tend to have higher HDL due to estrogen (needs to be over 50 mg/dL) • Triglycerides • Normal – less than 150 mg/dL • Borderline high – 150 – 199 mg/dL • High – above 200 mg/dL Source: National Cholesterol Education Program, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
Common misconceptions • Using margarine instead of butter will help lower my cholesterol • Thin people don’t have to worry about high cholesterol • If a label lists no cholesterol, it’s a “heart-healthy” choice • Eggs – good or bad? • Women don’t need to worry about cholesterol • Only middle-aged people should have their cholesterol checked
What affects cholesterol? • Diet • Poly and monounsaturated fats may help lower cholesterol when used in place of saturated fats, but still limit • High carbs, excessive alcohol may increase triglycerides • Soluble fiber may lower LDL, not HDL • Weight • Physical activity • Age • Gender • Heredity
Why does it matter? • Coronary heart disease is caused by atherosclerosis • Single leading cause of death • The higher LDL you have plus risk factors increases risk for heart attack • Smoking • High Blood pressure • Low HDL • Family history of early heart disease • Age
Prevention of high cholesterol • Get it checked • Watch fats, eat healthy • Consume less than 300 mg of cholesterol a day • Be active • Quit smoking • Some may need medication • Lipitor, Crestor, Zocor • Vytorin • Zetia
Blood pressure • 1 in 3 adults has hypertension • No symptoms, nearly 1/3 of those people don’t know they have it • No known cause • 2 forces • Blood pumps to arteries and through circulatory system • Arteries resist blood flow • Arteries elastic, stretchy • Heart beats 60-80 times a minute
Blood pressure • Systolic (top) – heart is beating • Diastolic (bottom) – heart resting • Normal – 120/80 mm Hg • Pre-hypertensive – 120-139/80-89 mm Hg • Hypertensive – 140/90 mm Hg • May take several readings • “White coat hypertension” • Hypertension increases risk for heart disease and stroke • Number 1 controllable risk factor for stroke
Blood pressure • Sodium/salt • Holds excess fluid in body, heart has to work harder • Potassium • Blunts effects of salt on blood pressure
Common misconceptions • Symptoms of high blood pressure include nervousness, sweating, and difficulty sleeping • High cholesterol = high blood pressure • Everyone has high blood pressure, I don’t need to worry • Women don’t need to worry about high blood pressure
Controlling hypertension • Reduce fat (particularly saturated fat) • Stop smoking • Cut back on alcohol • Be active • May need medication • Stress management
Heart disease risk factors • Uncontrollable • Age • Male gender • Heredity (including race) – African Americans = higher blood pressure. Also higher among other races • Controllable • Smoking (2-4x higher than non-smokers) • High cholesterol (high HDL can be positive risk factor) • High blood pressure
Heart disease risk factors • Controllable • Physical inactivity • Obesity/overweight (especially in abdominal area) • Diabetes • Other factors • Stress • Too much alcohol • Moderate drinkers = less risk than non-drinkers (may increase HDL cholesterol)
Phytonutrients • Soy protein may reduce risk of heart disease • Especially when replacing foods high in saturated fat • Plant sterols/stanols • Found naturally in fruits/veggies, plant oils may lower LDL • Omega-3 fatty acids • Two weekly servings of fish may be heart healthy • Folic Acid • May lower homocysteine levels • Antioxidants
Questions?? • Activity time!