Richter W O
Institut für Fettstoffwechsel und Hämorheologie, Windach.
MMW Fortschr Med. 2003 Aug 7;145(31-32):29-32.
When LDL cholesterol is elevated, HDL cholesterol is low or triglycerides are raised, dietary changes form the basis of treatment. Such changes are most important in the case of hypertriglyceridemia. Some 3 to 4 hours after a meal, triglycerides increase to an extent determined by the composition of the meal. Hypertriglyceridemia cannot be successfully treated unless alcohol is banished and rapidly assimilatable carbohydrates are restricted. In patients with elevated LDL cholesterol, a change in eating habits can have an appreciable effect (on average 10-15%). Since this measure can save the use or reduce the dose of medications, its value is obvious, and it must not be neglected. The measures aimed at elevating HDL cholesterol have only a moderate effect, so that more importance should be attached to lowering the LDL fraction.