Cut Your Cholesterol A New And Simple Plan
Step 1 Go For Soluble Fiber
Fiber comes in two basic styles insoluble, found in wheat bran and the indigestible parts of vegetables and fruit; and soluble, prevalent in oat bran, oatmeal, citrus fruits, and most types of beans. As for the difference between the two types, it's quite simple: Insoluble fiber does not dissolve in water, which makes it great for promoting regularity (and reducing risks of colon cancer), while soluble fiber does dissolve in water, which makes it great for cleaning out cholesterol. How? Maybe by flushing cholesterol out of the small intestine before it has a chance to get to artery walls. Some scientists theorize that soluble fiber binds with bile, a digestive fluid that contains goodly amounts of cholesterol, in a way that causes the bile to be excreted in the stool. The result: less cholesterol circulating in the bloodstream, where it can cause trouble. Research by Prevention adviser James W. Anderson, M.D., shows that the addition of soluble fiber to the diet can have a significant and immediate impact on high chole sterol levels. In one study, Dr. Anderson found that men with cholesterol levels around 260 experienced 60 point drops in just three weeks (American Journal of Clinical Nutrition). In another, longer study, cholesterol levels averaging 294 fell by 76 points in six months. That's a 26 percent reduction! And it didn't take truckloads of soluble fiber to achieve these impressive results. The amount in a mere a cups of beans daily, or a single cup of oat bran daily, did the trick. Other very preliminary research suggests that the soluble fiber in rice bran and apple pectin may share these same cholesterol dissolving powers. Include a tasty variety of all of these cholesterol bas hers in your diet, and your cholesterol could suddenly find itself without a leg to stand on.
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