A new study in JAMA indicates that nonfasting triglyceride levels are associated with stroke risk. This data follows other recent research linking them to heart attacks. Nonfasting triglycerides are not measured on routine blood tests, which are typically fasting. Nonfasting triglycerides are more reflective of what your body is actually doing during the day. Every time you snack between meals you raise your triglycerides, which is why rule #2 of the Leptin Diet is to eat three meals a day and do not snack.
Read More: DHA,
leptin resistance,
niacin,
nonfasting triglycerides,
Pantethine,
stroke
The simplistic notion that LDL cholesterol is “bad” and HDL cholesterol is “good” has only one purpose in public health dogma: scaring people into taking toxic statin drugs to lower their LDL cholesterol. A new study shows that some people with high HDL cholesterol have increased rates of chest pain, heart attack, and death – but who?
Read More: cardiovascular risk,
Daily Super E™,
Fiber Helper™,
HDL cholesterol,
LeptiCardio Pack™,
Leptinal®,
niacin,
Pantethine,
PoliBlue™
More than 50 years of research indicates that niacin can help lower your triglycerides, raise your HDL cholesterol (good cholesterol), improve your circulation, and lower your LDL cholesterol and Lipoprotein A. These effects are likely to positively support weight management.
Read More: ApoA-1,
ApoB,
inositol hexanicotinate,
LDL cholesterol,
Lipoprotein A,
niacin,
raising HDL,
Triglycerides