10 foods that lower cholesterol
1. Oats. An easy first step to improving your
cholesterol is having a bowl of oatmeal or cold oat-based cereal like
Cheerios for breakfast. It gives you 1 to 2 grams of soluble fiber. Add a
banana or some strawberries for another half-gram. Current nutrition
guidelines recommend getting 20 to 35 grams of fiber a day, with at
least 5 to 10 grams coming from soluble fiber. (The average American
gets about half that amount.)
2. Barley and other whole grains. Like oats and oat bran, barley and other whole grains can help lower the risk of heart disease, mainly via the soluble fiber they deliver.
2. Barley and other whole grains. Like oats and oat bran, barley and other whole grains can help lower the risk of heart disease, mainly via the soluble fiber they deliver.
3. Beans. Beans are especially rich in soluble
fiber. They also take awhile for the body to digest, meaning you feel
full for longer after a meal. That's one reason beans are a useful food
for folks trying to lose weight. With so many choices — from navy and
kidney beans to lentils, garbanzos, black-eyed peas, and beyond — and so
many ways to prepare them, beans are a very versatile food.
4. Eggplant and okra. These two low-calorie vegetables are good sources of soluble fiber.
5. Nuts. A bushel of studies shows that eating
almonds, walnuts, peanuts, and other nuts is good for the heart. Eating
2 ounces of nuts a day can slightly lower LDL, on the order of 5%. Nuts
have additional nutrients that protect the heart in other ways.
6. Vegetable oils. Using liquid vegetable oils
such as canola, sunflower, safflower, and others in place of butter,
lard, or shortening when cooking or at the table helps lower LDL.
7. Apples, grapes, strawberries, citrus fruits. These fruits are rich in pectin, a type of soluble fiber that lowers LDL.
8. Foods fortified with sterols and stanols.
Sterols and stanols extracted from plants gum up the body's ability to
absorb cholesterol from food. Companies are adding them to foods ranging
from margarine and granola bars to orange juice and chocolate. They're
also available as supplements. Getting 2 grams of plant sterols or
stanols a day can lower LDL cholesterol by about 10%.
9. Soy. Eating soybeans and foods made from
them, like tofu and soy milk, was once touted as a powerful way to lower
cholesterol. Analyses show that the effect is more modest — consuming
25 grams of soy protein a day (10 ounces of tofu or 2 1/2 cups of soy
milk) can lower LDL by 5% to 6%.
10. Fatty fish. Eating fish two or three times
a week can lower LDL in two ways: by replacing meat, which has
LDL-boosting saturated fats, and by delivering LDL-lowering omega-3
fats. Omega-3s reduce triglycerides in the bloodstream and also protect
the heart by helping prevent the onset of abnormal heart rhythms.
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