I just realized you posted this question in another thread, and I only saw it now .. sorry about that
Have you been following your cholesterol and triglycerides all along?? Were they normal three years ago before you started low-carbing? Generally, a properly followed low-carb program should and will bring blood fat levels down nicely. Triglycerides especially, since trigs. require glucose in order to be formed.
It's possible that your time "off the wagon" had an adverse effect.
.. Especially if you were eating a fair bit of sugar and sweet things.
If your blood tests were fine up to this period of low-carbing now, it's possible you might have developed a sensitivity to arachidonic acid. In some people, this can cause cholesterol, and blood pressure too .. to go up, even though they are losing weight and body fat just fine with the low-carb diet. The Drs. Eades of Protein Power explain it thus:
Quote:
First, you can’t do the Protein Power Plan halfway (or any low-carb program). You can’t increase your protein foods haphazardly and continue to eat carbohydrates as you do now and expect to see results. In fact, you’ll be worsening your problems if you do so.
Second, there are some people who may have problems with large amounts of red meat and large quantities of egg yolks. These people: have elevated blood pressure and/or cholesterol, retain abnormally high amounts of fluid, and/or suffer from inflammatory conditions such as skin rashes, asthma, allergies, bursitis, or arthritis.
It’s not the cholesterol in red meat and egg yolks that is the problem. It’s the fact that they are high in arachidonic acid, which can promote or worsen the above conditions.
Here is the strategy for these folks to follow: Eliminate red meat and egg yolks from your diet completely for three weeks. At the end of the three week period, take stock of your health. Has it improved? Eat a large portion of red meat and eggs for a couple of meals and observe what happens. If your problems reappear of get worse, you are sensitive to arachidonic acid and should have these foods only once in a while. When you do have them, make sure to remove as much of the fat from the beef as possible. Grill the beef. This will reduce the arachidonic acid by as much as 35%. Another option is to marinate the meat in a combination of red wine and olive oil or light sesame oil for 24 hours before grilling.
As far as eggs are concerned, have no more than one or two whole eggs at a sitting, and eat egg whites the rest of the time. Also, you should avoid margarine altogether (as everyone should).
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Don't try to go totally lowfat in your diet. You need cholesterol, it's a vital fat that is required to make hormones and other functions in the body. If you don't eat foods with fat AND CHOLESTEROL in them, your liver will make its own cholesterol to provide the body what it needs. The liver isn't very efficient as a cholesterol-making factory ... since it was only designed to make cholesterol in emergencies, during periods of famine, when no fat is coming from the diet. It's now well-known that the cholesterol you make in your own liver is more harmful than the cholesterol you eat.
That's how the cholesterol-lowering drugs work ... they stop the liver from making cholesterol. Unfortunately, they are very hard on the liver, and the side effects are not nice, including gall bladder disease. IMHO, that's an awfully high risk for such expense, and most studies show they only bring about a 10% reduction in serum cholesterol anyway.
Please
read this letter, and the posts following it ... from a man who overcame severe heart disease and high cholesterol (over 9!) by following Atkins STRICTLY, no cheating ... and is still healthy and well 3 years later, and still low-carbing too
Hope this information is helpful for you.
Doreen