Thoracic Spine Mobility (Upper Back)

thor-rot-a-maleThoracic spine (T-spine) mobility is important for shoulder health as well as lower back health. It allows us to bend forward and backward (flexion/extension), side to side and twist (rotation). Lack of mobility in the T-spine may result in shoulder pain, neck pain or pain in the lumbar spine. If the T-spine is not extending properly it will be difficult to fully flex the shoulders and the resulting compensation will be excessive lumbar extension. The shoulders can also compensate for an immobile T-spine as the shoulder blades begin to move further away from the spine and tilt anteriorly on the rib cage, again increasing the likelihood of shoulder injuries and other issues. Lifting, pulling, and pushing heavy objects will be difficult and painful with an immobile thoracic spine. Over head pressing is one these movements that can cause some serious pain and complications. Limited extension in our T-spine will alter the forces of over head pressing, placing the weight in front of the head instead of over the head. The lumbar spine then takes the brunt of the extension needed to move the weight. Remember, the range of motion has to come from somewhere and if the T-spine is not doing a whole lot of moving, other parts at each end of the chain may suffer. Here are some good examples of mobilization for the T-spine that can be implemented into our dynamic warm up. Quadruped Extension Rotation [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p6DyjwCgZ60] Bench T-Spine Mobilization [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H8xds0f922I] How to Develop Thoracic Spine Mobility - Part 1: Extension [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRJ8OQSWei8] How to Develop Thoracic Spine Mobility - Part 2: Rotation & Lateral Flexion [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_JmUAxulZgc]
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Pairing Strength Training With “Fillers”

Pairing Strength training with “Fillers” People waste way too much time in the gym. A 5-minute rest interval between your sets of bench press that includes checking your emails on your phone, sending a text message, going to the water fountain and gazing up at the ESPN highlights on the T.V. is negatively affecting your ability to get work done. Ironically, this is usually the same person that complains that they “don’t have time to train”. Now, if you are between sets of a max effort bench press that is 1.5-2 times your body weight and training for absolute strength than I can justify something longer than a 2 minute rest period. Everyone else should be spending that time on another set, a different exercise (as part of a circuit, or superset) or something called a “filler”. mens-health-workout_kneeling-hip-flexor-stretchFillers are mobility drills that can be added between lifts as part of an active rest that directly affect a particular limitation in the succeeding lift being performed. Fillers ensure that you don’t waste time standing around between sets. Pairing the right lifts with the right mobilizations can have a dramatic effect on improving strength. An example would be spending a minute on some hip flexor mobilizations if you are having trouble getting your glutes to fire during a deadlift. Tight hip flexors will limit glute recruitment. Mobility/Stability and Strength are directly related. This is why I spend so much of my time explaining and implementing the importance of dynamic warm ups, soft tissue work, activation drills and corrective exercises. However, no one looks forward to spending 20 minutes on their weakness or something they suck at, plus it’s boring. While I am all for corrective exercise, and feel like it should be a staple of any properly designed program, it does tend to get overemphasized at times. Corrective exercise should be a component of a program, not the program. Just rolling around on the carpet trying to connect a dozen corrective exercises before a work out with no rhyme or reason is not going to benefit us. This is why fillers are so great. We can spend several minutes before and after our main lifts of the day attacking areas of positioning in which we are lacking range of motion and motor control and still kick ass at the same time. Remember, while a dynamic warm up and any mobility/activation work done before a training session is more general, a filler exercise should directly focus on a the weakest link or biggest limitation in the succeeding lift. Here are three examples of some great filler exercises for the squat, bench and deadlift. The filler exercises is marked with an * A1) Bench Press A2) Band Pull Aparts [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=73Dm-j5wYIc] B1) Barbell Back Squat B2) Chin ups B3) Ankle dorsiflexion mobilization [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4iVv_z_Zao&feature=player_embedded]C1) Dead lift C2) Single Arm Dumbbell Row C3) Half kneeling hip flexor stretch [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OFcNuKsRIVc&feature=player_embedded ]
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Learning How To Hinge

blog-fitnovatives-042414-2Learning How To Hinge The hip hinge (in my opinion) is the most important and powerful movement pattern humans need to perform properly. Generally speaking, it is any flexion/extension movement originating at the hips where there is a optimal posterior weight shift. Any time we bend down to pick something up, sit down and get up from a chair, bend over to brush our teeth, etc. we (should be) hip hinging. Transfer this movement to strength training and some related lifts include deadlifts, power cleans, box squats, good mornings and kettle bell swings. Sadly, most people find this basic pattern of a healthy lifestyle difficult to master. The issues arise from poor hip mobility, tight hamstrings, a weak posterior chain, and no stability. The end result is people bending over with rounded backs hundreds of times a day and over 80% of Americans suffering from some sort of back pain. This can all be corrected if we start learning how to move properly and start “patterning” or engraining the hip hinge correctly. The hinge is simply achieved by pushing your butt back. The Wall Drill: [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lfK1-6q8tXY] 1. Stand next to a wall facing away. Hinge so your butt touches the wall. Step about six inches from the wall and repeat the butt touch. (Your back should stay flat) 2. Now, simply move an inch or two more and repeat. Keep doing this: touch the wall and scoot out a little more until you can no longer prevent your back from going into flexion. The Dowel Drill: [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3fR7n-k6Qs] To perform this exercise, place a dowel along your back so there are three points of contact: the back of your head, the upper back, and the sacrum. From there, with your feet shoulder width apart and toes pointed slightly outward, sit back with the hips, all the while maintaining contact at the three points. If you ever lose contact, you're doing the movement incorrectly and you should start over. Load the movement: Once you have the wall and dowel drills perfected we can start to load the movement pattern. Do not let form break down here. Make sure the individual performs the hip hinge with a controlled tempo on the eccentric phase of the hinge. ( Pretend like you are a rubber band or a bow and arrow) The more you can prime the hamstrings and glutes the more powerful the “snap”. When you feel your hamstrings burning you know you have it right. Once you are in that position, snap your hips forward and clench your glutes. (the getting shot in the ass analogy usually works here). The bottom line is by teaching our clients how to properly hip hinge we will be sparing their backs and alleviating perhaps hundreds of subsequent flexion moments throughout the day. Remember, no amount of moist heat packs and massage therapy will make up for crappy movement patterns on a daily basis.
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Mighty Cholesterol Part 2: The Real Cause of Heart Disease (featured on Elite FTS)

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Goals, Weight Loss, and Motivation (featured on Elite FTS)

goals-weightloss-and-motivation-600x250
“Why am I not achieving my goals?” So there it is, the million dollar question. Believe me, as a trainer, there isn’t anything more frustrating than training someone who is progressing slowly. While I will say that I often take responsibility for this, it is hardly fair to myself. A trainer is there to provide you with a sound fitness regimen and to encourage you, educate you, and record progress. That’s his job. It’s your job to do it and do it to the best of your ability as well as show up regularly, work out on your own, and eat a clean diet. It is also your job to maintain focus and mental toughness en route to your goal. That last one is often overlooked, but I can tell you that the fire in someone’s eyes usually tells the story and is often synonymous with the body he or she is representing. First, you should look at what your goals are. If my goal is to run a 4.2 second 40-yard dash, it’s pretty safe to assume that won’t happen. I mean it’s science to know that you can only change a small percentage (around 17 percent) of your muscle fibers, and while I can absolutely get faster and stronger, sometimes we just have to accept our limitations. Having said that, I should clarify that all your goals must be realistic for your ability, age, and lifestyle. Close-up of an athletic torsoSo let’s take one classic example that nine out of ten Americans are still hooked on ever since the 1980s:six-pack abs. I will tell you that there isn’t anything more annoying than hearing this term. I say this because no matter how many times I answer it, it still comes up. Folks, six-pack abs aren’t a sign of good health. In fact, sometimes you may just see the outline of someone’s rectus abdominus muscles because they haven’t eaten in three days! How do you see your abs? Simple, you lose the visceral fat that’s lying on top of them by eating right and doing compound, big calorie burning exercises (i.e. squats, deadlifts). How do you strengthen them? Simple, you contract those muscles with flexion exercises. However, if this is all you do without counterbalancing the muscles that extend your spine as well, you may just find yourself with six-pack abs and a host of back problems. It’s risk versus reward, my friends. Take it from someone who used to think that doing 500 crunches daily was the answer. Today, I hardly ever do sit-ups but rather approach the core muscles (those surrounding your hips, torso, and spine) as a complete unit. The results are far more significant. So goals need to be realistic. Let’s talk about the other goal that most Americans have: to lose weight. This is another one that doesn’t tell the whole story. More importantly than weight is body fat. If you lose your body fat, you’re left with lean muscle. I assure you that if you’re walking around with mostly muscle, you will look and feel like muscle, which will make you forget about what your weight is. But let me give you an example of why this isn’t the best goal. Say Joe Smith has a goal to lose 15 pounds. He weighs 200 pounds. His body fat is currently twenty percent (or 40 pounds), leaving 160 pounds of lean mass (bones and muscle). He works his ass off in the gym for six months and comes out weighing 190 pounds. He’s now confused and wondering why he hasn’t lost more with all his efforts. I mean, he drank his protein shakes after his workouts, he ate lots of fiber and veggies, and he put in at least three workouts per week. Well, it’s very possible that Joe did lose 15 pounds and even more, but he doesn’t know this and is frustrated. He goes and gets his body fat tested and it reads twelve percent. Now he should be excited! This means that in six months, he burned eight percent body fat! That’s 16 pounds right there! So why is he still weighing in at 190 pounds? Simple, he gained six pounds of muscle. Not a bad swap if you ask me. And let’s not forget about water weight. Fluctuating by two to three pounds isn’t a big deal and is pretty normal. I personally have weighed myself before and after workouts and have seen a difference of nearly two pounds. waist-to-hip-freeimage-8234367Another example of why weight loss isn’t a good indicator is the ever-so-popular-among-doctors BMI scale. This scale is simply a height to weight ratio. I personally put much more emphasis on the hip to waist ratio, which explains the story a bit better. To clarify, the visceral fat you carry around your midsection near your stomach and organs is what’s dangerous. If your hip to waist ratio is in a safe zone (0.8 or less for women and 0.9 or less for men), you’re fine (assuming you are under the obesity breakpoints of a 40-inch and 35-inch waistline for men and women, respectively). Case in point, a typical NFL running back is about 200 pounds and is usually in the 5-foot, 10-inch range. This puts his BMI at 28.7, which is in the overweight category (18.5–24.9 is the recommendation). We then measure him and get a 31-inch waist and 40-inch hips, putting his hip to waist ratio at 0.77, or in the low-risk category. If you took a look at this athletic stud, he has the “V” shape to his torso that most guys are after. He’s strong, shapely, and toned. Overweight is the last term you would use to describe him. His body fat is low, and his lean muscle is high. Regardless of what any doctor says, this guy is one healthy individual as far as weight goes. Conversely, a woman weighing 115 pounds and who is 5-foot-6 represents a BMI of 18.6. She’s obviously on the lower end of the risk category. Her weight is low because she’s consuming the diet of a mouse so that she can look like Kelly Rippa (don’t laugh, I’ve heard it more than once). She doesn’t consume enough protein and is surprisingly carrying a higher percentage of body fat for someone of her stature. Her waist is 28 inches and her hips are 32 inches. This puts her hip to waist measurement at 0.88, which is actually much higher than it should be and indicates that she isn’t carrying her weight safely at all. OK, so now we know that we need to set goals we can actually achieve and that focus on fat loss is more important than focus on weight loss. So, let’s take a look at the other, and perhaps most important, aspect of why people don’t obtain their goals: motivation. Biggest-Loser-Chal-TITLE-FINAL-282x300We’ve all seen the Biggest Loser, a show that I soon realized is completely unrealistic. Let me tell you why. First, these people have signed up to put all things aside and live on a ranch where their diets are monitored, they’re forced to train three times a day, and they’re pushed hard by three different trainers to the point of complete exhaustion (i.e. vomiting, etc.). They have one responsibility—to lose weight. They don’t have any obligations to their jobs, home, or kids and are motivated by television, families, and money. With this sort of structure, it is almost impossible not to get drastic results. When was the last time you trained three times daily for three months straight? If you did, you would lose 15 pounds in a week, too (if you even have that weight to lose). Remember, obese people will lose weight much faster than an average person. And just for the record, the recommendation for safe weight loss is one to two pounds per week. But safety has clearly been substituted for television ratings, as I watch a 375-pound woman being yelled at to try to perform a 12-inch box jump. You don’t have to be a trainer to know that if someone can barely squat or lunge, asking her to perform a plyometric that will create significant stress and force on her joints isn’t only contraindicated by everything I’ve learned about training, but it is just plain stupid. OK, we aren’t on television and don’t have money being flashed in front of us, but we still need to get motivated. How? Well, let’s take a look at the things that don’t motivate us—jobs, stress, kids, time, and lack of results. That last one is an important one. I strongly believe that if we set short-term goals that we can obtain, we will stay motivated as we see progress. As far as the other things, they’re hardly acceptable. Your job isn’t 24/7, and I assure you that you can workout at least three hours weekly and still do well at your job. In fact, you’d probably do better with a nervous system that is more alert as a result of your training. Stress…well, that’s just another reason to exercise because it’s been proven to help reduce it. Kids…well, kids will be kids, and they should have activities as well. However, exercise shouldn’t take the place of quality time with your kids. But I can tell you that I’ve trained a middle-aged individual with a full-time job and six kids. I rest my case. The last one is time. If I had a dollar every time someone told me that he didn’t have the time, I would be rich. The truth is that you have to make time. There are approximately twelve waking hours in the day, which equates to 84 hours a week. Most people work 40 hours, which leaves 44 hours. Let’s say 60 hours to account for commuting. I think you can still find two to three hours to workout with your remaining 24 hours. Keeping TimeI once had a client who canceled a lot because she “didn’t have time.” Ironically, that same woman often showed up in new fitness attire. I started to think, “this woman spends much more time shopping and preparing to workout than actually working out!” Think about what is important to you and put those in order of priority. If you’re to see results, training needs to become one of your top priorities. It needs to be a scheduled, regular thing just like your job. If you can’t make it to the gym, there’s always something you can do, even if it’s a simple 20-minute body weight workout in your home. Like Nike says, “Just Do It.” Achieving your goals essentially comes down to just that—telling yourself that you’re going to do it. It’s a mindset. It’s too easy to point the finger, but you are where you are because of your choices. That goes for all aspects of your life. Accept accountability, stop making excuses, and decide to change. If your goals aren’t realistic, have someone like a trainer help you set them so that they are. Prepare healthy meals when you have free time so that you don’t make bad decisions to eat fast food. Figure out a plan based on your lifestyle and stick to it. So why aren’t you achieving your goals? Maybe you can tell me the answer, but no matter what your answer is, it is always the same answer—you haven’t yet committed yourself to them.
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Evolution or Epidemic? (featured on Elite FTS)

evolution-glitch-600x250 At times, some of the simplest things in life can be the most amazing. Take a young child for instance. As we grow, we learn through trial and error. As a baby learns to crawl, stand, and eventually walk, he fails many times. However, he doesn’t have any concept of failure. He doesn’t get frustrated and he doesn’t give up. The only thing that makes sense to him is to get up and try again. Eventually, we begin to walk and explore. We bend down to pick things up. We learn how to feed ourselves. We grab and throw things we aren’t supposed to. We learn all these movements on our own when our bodies aren’t even close to being fully developed. As humans, these basic primal patterns are part of our evolution. It’s what defines us as a species. Crawling, squatting, bending, reaching, running, twisting, and pulling are all movements that we were given as a gift from our friend, evolution. Unfortunately, friends sometimes take advantage of one another. For millions of years, we used our primal movement patterns to hunt and gather food, build and find shelter, defend against enemies, and take care of our loved ones. It’s these primal movement patterns that allowed us to eventually rise to the top of the food chain. However, as of late, we as human beings have started to take what evolution has given us for granted. It isn’t any surprise that advances in technology have made it easier as a species to live, work, and play. It’s what has got us here in the first place. From the very first hunting tools to the invention of the wheel to the internet, humans have been advancing for millions of years through simple trial and error. The question is, have we finally outdone ourselves? Have we created so many solutions, quick fixes, and shortcuts that we’ve lost sight of what has gotten us here in the first place? I’ll go out on a Stone Age limb here and say most definitely. Let’s go back to the baby. Have you ever watched a toddler squat to pick up a ball? Without any guidance or cues, a baby can hold a squatting position with an upright torso, hips below parallel, feet straight with weight on the heels, knees tracked over the toes, and head in a neutral position with a flat back. How many adults do you know that can do this? How many hours do we waste as trainers, coaches, and physical therapists cueing adults as to how to perform the most fundamental and basic movement pattern that babies perform on a regular basis? How many times have you heard that squatting is bad for your knees? Don’t squat below parallel? Squatting hurts my back? Surely, as adults, we are more structurally sound, have a stronger core, and have better balance than that of a two-year-old. So then why is it that it seems so many of us adults have fallen into an evolutionary ditch? The answer is quite obvious. We, as humans, are far less active now than we were ever before in the history of mankind. Let’s explore the old saying “use it or lose it.” The human body was designed for movement. As bipedal mammals, we have a huge advantage over quadrupeds. Bipedalism has given us the ability to transport food; feed in an upright, stationary position; avoid predatory attacks through better vision; and use tools in many different positions. Children are a perfect example of the beauty of human movement. As a child, we don’t care about the laws of motion or the fear of hazards when learning to crawl, stand, and walk. We don’t have joint pain or back spasms. We don’t associate basic movements like bending over, squatting, or jumping with pain. We are totally free in our surroundings. When we stop moving, we lose our functionality. We were not designed to sit for prolonged periods of time. Whether sitting in a car, behind a desk, or in front of televisions and computers, sitting has started a new evolution of the human race. I have heard the term “de-evolution” before and, quite frankly, this is a misnomer. Whether good or bad, evolution is defined by any change in the inherited characteristics of a population over successive generations. Unfortunately, our current generation, especially in the Western world, is no longer a society that is forced to exert ourselves in order to survive. Let’s look at some interesting statistics. As of 2010, almost three million Americans work from home. More than 80 percent of the workforce have jobs that are sedentary or only require light activity. About 140 million Americans commute to work, ten million of which commute more than sixty minutes. Eighty-five percent of males and 65 percent of females work more than forty hours per week. Americans spend almost eight hours a day sitting (almost twice as much as other countries). Americans average about two hours of exercise each week (this is being generous). That’s a whole lot of sitting. Now, I understand that the majority of us, including myself, have to support our families and put food on the table. Whether this means working forty-hour work weeks or commuting five days a week, we do what it takes to support ourselves and loved ones during hard times. However, when I see grown men and women who are relatively healthy unable to perform some of the most basic movements of human life, it drives me crazy. Maybe the apocalypse has come early because seeing so many humans move like zombies all day is downright scary. There are 168 hours in a week. We are only exerting ourselves on average for two of those hours. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that this ratio is slightly off. No matter what our responsibilities are, it should never get this bad. Back pain is estimated to cost Americans twenty to fifty billion dollars annually. There isn’t any reason why we need to live our lives in constant pain or fear of moving because we might injure ourselves. Children don’t complain of back pain. They run, jump, crawl, and roll all day long. Their supple little bodies are receiving constant sensory information, which keeps their muscles and joints flexible and mobile. Tight, short, and stiff muscles and immobile joints will more than likely cause pain. People, we need to start moving again. I might be going on a tangent here, but the sitting epidemic has gotten so bad that there is now such a thing called a “comfort height toilet.” This is a toilet with an extra two inches of height to allow an elderly person or someone who needs more assistance in the bathroom. Are you kidding me? Americans are now having trouble standing up from a sit, never mind a squat, position. I’m sorry, but if I ever get to the point in my life where I have lost the ability to sit down to take a poop, that will be my final day. In fact, let’s stay on the topic of pooping for just a moment. Before the modern flushing toilet was invented—:somewhere around the nineteenth century, humans actually had to squat down to take a poop. Can you believe that? Now, don’t get me wrong. Indoor plumbing is something I definitely don’t want to live without. However, pooping on our comfortable commodes for the last 200 years or so might not be the evolutionary blessing we might think it is. According to proctologists, humans aren’t meant to sit on toilets. We were meant to squat in the field. In fact, this suggestion isn’t anything new. These arguments and studies date back to the 1950s and 1960s when doctors were warning us that the mechanics of defecating actually can affect our health. Sparing you the details of pooping, I will say that the proponents of sitting on a toilet produce an anorectal angle that is ill-suited for defecation. Squatting straightens out this angle and makes defecation more complete. The issue of how we have been eliminating our waste has been linked with hemorrhoids, disease causing toxins, Crohn’s disease, and even colon cancer. So what the hell are we supposed to do? The idea of squatting on top of our toilets like we are catchers at a baseball game is not the safest idea, but let’s stop and think about something for a second. For hundreds of thousands of years, humans have squatted. Today, billions of humans squat because they simply can’t afford a toilet or don’t have a home. Many more of us in Asia and the Middle East squat to rest and eat and have designed toilets specifically for squatting. It’s just something to think about. Let’s get back to our primal roots or at least try. Let’s teach ourselves how to move again. There are plenty of ways that we can incorporate mobility and flexibility exercises into our day. Just pushing ourselves away from our desks and standing up to move and stretch, even if it’s just for a minute or a few seconds, will help. Start with a joint by joint approach. Start from the ground up and work on the joints and parts of our bodies that seek mobility first. These include the ankles, hips, thoracic spine, and glenohumeral joints. Let me borrow one of my favorite quotes from someone everyone is familiar with when it comes to movement—physical therapist Grey Cook: “When the intended mobile joint becomes immobile, the stable joint is forced to move as compensation, becoming less stable and subsequently painful.” The process is simple:
  • Lose ankle mobility and get knee pain.
  • Lose hip mobility and get low back pain.
  • Lose thoracic mobility and get neck and shoulder pain or low back pain.
“Looking at the body on a joint-by-joint basis beginning with the ankle, this makes sense,” Cook says. Grey’s “Functional Movement Systems” and “Athletic Body in Balance” is a must have for anyone interested in measuring and improving movement quality. Kelly Starrett is another great physical therapist and coach who has also been sharing some terrific stuff as of late over at San Francisco Cross Fit. Kelly mentions, “The real benefit of mobility is the mechanical advantage. Ideal positioning allows for optimal power output. Until you’ve got proper range in all your joints, you simply haven’t discovered your body’s real potential.” I highly recommend anyone who is suffering from any sort of joint pain/mobility issues to check out his MobilityWod blog as well as his six exercises for maximum mobility. I also dare anyone to try his ten-minute squat test. The bottom line is that immobility can cause postural defects, loss of strength and muscle mass, loss of balance, sluggish circulation, osteoporosis, obesity, and infections. The list can go on. All of these problems can be prevented if we just start taking better care of our bodies. Most people could use more ankle, hip, and thoracic spine mobility as well as some soft tissue work in these areas. By working on our range of motion in these areas, we can improve or even eliminate pain in areas that are meant to be stable (knees, low back, shoulders). Don’t get me wrong—soft tissue work is also just as important as mobility and should even supersede mobility at times. However, that is out of the scope of this article. Below are three of my favorite mobility drills for the ankles, hip, and thoracic spine. What’s great about these drills is that you only need to dedicate ten minutes of your time and they can be performed anywhere. Ankle mobility:
  • Half kneeling dorsiflexion (against wall)
  • Quadruped rocking ankle mobilization
  • Lateral leg swings (transverse ankle)
Hip mobility:
  • Striders
  • Cook squat
  • Wall squat progressions
T-spine mobility:
  • Foam roller T-spine flexion/extension
  • Quadruped extension/rotation
  • Wall slides
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Mighty Cholesterol (featured on Elite FTS)

stockvault-highrise100350-copy-600x250 The name makes us cringe. It strikes fear into the hearts of men, women, and children. Our doctors scorn us for it. “Experts” say we need to keep a close eye on it after our thirty-fifth birthday. But what the heck is it? Good cholesterol? Bad cholesterol? What’s a triglyceride? Most of our adult life, we're told that this “thing” called cholesterol is an evil demon that clogs our arteries. It's usually spoken in the same sentence as heart disease, cancer, and stroke. Google the word “cholesterol” and you will get 105,000,000 results. It isn't any wonder that our heads start to spin and our blood pressure rises every time the doctor mentions the “C” word.  But how many of us actually know what cholesterol is? What it’s made of? How it’s produced? Why do we fear cholesterol? I'll tell you why, but first we need to have a basic understanding of what it is so that your next check up is a little more enjoyable and that you can make some wiser decisions. Thank me later.

What is cholesterol?

First, let’s get the basics out of the way so we can actually start debunking our fears of cholesterol. What is it? Without getting too in depth, cholesterol is a waxy, fat like substance that is naturally found in every cell and most parts of the body. As you read this, there is cholesterol all over your body. It is absolutely vital for our bodies to function optimally. Cholesterol in the blood is controlled in two important places:
  • the liver, where cholesterol is produced
  • the intestines, where cholesterol is absorbed
It is the essential building block for all our sex hormones as well as the hormones made and released by the adrenal glands. Cholesterol also protects and insulates nerve fibers and builds and repairs cell membranes. Some even call it “nature’s Band-Aid.” Doesn’t sound so bad, does it?

Triglycerides

When our doctor gives us a blood test for cholesterol, triglycerides are also included. Think of triglycerides as the cousin of cholesterol, mired in the shadows but always a team player. They're simply another form of a lipid or fat that circulates in our bloodstream and provides much of the energy for our tissues to function. They protect our organs from injury and provide insulation to maintain our body temperature. Sounds even better, right?

HDL vs. LDL

Because cholesterol can't be dissolved in the blood, it along with triglycerides and other special proteins are transported in tiny packages called lipoproteins. Enter HDL and LDL. We hear about HDL and LDL the most. HDL and LDL stand for “high density lipoprotein” and “low density lipoprotein.” HDL is considered the “good” cholesterol chemical because it carries cholesterol plaque away from the body's arteries back to the liver where it can pass out of our system. LDL is considered “bad” because it carries cholesterol from the liver around the bloodstream, which could potentially cause a buildup of plaque. What does a cholesterol blood test measure? A fasting blood test can measure cholesterol levels as well as triglyceride levels in our blood. The test, also called a lipoprotein panel or profile, can measure:
  • total cholesterol and triglycerides
  • total HDL
  • total LDL
OK, so now what? Our doctors tell us that we need to keep our total cholesterol levels below 200 mg/dl and our LDL levels below 100 mg/dl to avoid cardiovascular risk. For HDL levels, above 60 mg/dl is the target number for optimal protection. Doctors can also take these numbers along with age, family history, and other risk factors and use them to estimate a ten-year cardiovascular risk for an individual. This is known as a “Framingham risk score.” Our doctors proceed to tell us to “make some lifestyle modifications and take it easy on the fatty foods.” In most cases, they will even prescribe us a cholesterol lowering medication such as a statin, tell us our dose, and send us on our way. “Hey, you're the doctor!” Sounds easy enough, right?

At risk for a heart attack?

But what if I told you that a new national study in 2009 has shown that a whopping 75 percent of patients hospitalized for a heart attack had cholesterol levels that would indicate they weren't at high risk for a cardiovascular event based on current national cholesterol guidelines? “Almost 75 percent of heart attack patients fell within recommended targets for LDL cholesterol, demonstrating that the current guidelines may not be low enough to cut heart attack risk in most who could benefit,” said Dr. Gregg C. Fonarow, Eliot Corday professor of cardiovascular medicine and science at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and the study’s principal investigator. Researchers analyzed data from 136,905 patients hospitalized for a heart attack nationwide between 2000 and 2006 whose lipid levels upon hospital admission were documented. This accounted for 59 percent of total hospital admissions for heart attack at participating hospitals during the study period.

The real cause of heart disease

Simply put, the traditional risk factors aren't working.  Yes, it's important to understand and be aware of our total cholesterol, especially LDL and HDL, but this is just the beginning. The unfortunate truth is that the cholesterol numbers most conventional physicians measure today are becoming increasingly irrelevant. Instead of just looking at the total number of HDL and LDL in our blood, we need to take a look at the cholesterol particle size. The real question our doctors should be asking is, "Do you have small or large HDL or LDL particles?" Small, dense particles are more atherogenic (more likely to cause the plaque in the arteries that leads to heart attacks) than large, buoyant, fluffy cholesterol particles. These smaller particles can sneak through the tiny holes in the walls of our arteries, causing an atherogenic response. Our health risk has less to do with our cholesterol numbers than it does with the quantity and size of the cholesterol particles. We need to start asking our physicians about an “advanced lipid profile.” Thankfully, some doctors are already starting to suggest that it should replace both LDL and non-HDL cholesterol as both a screening test and a target of treatment. Advanced lipid testing can identify additional risk factors of coronary heart disease that standard blood cholesterol tests typically don't. For example, one kind of lipoprotein called Lp(a), also known as “lipoprotein little a,” may be important in certain people with heart disease. This is a fairly large molecule, but it tends to be easily oxidized (remember that oxidized cholesterol is much more toxic). Furthermore, there is a protein “tail” that can stimulate blood clotting. The following is a checklist of the major biological risk factors that can be ascertained with advanced lipid testing, including genetic markers and inflammatory markers.
  • Lipid profile (total cholesterol, HDL, LDL, triglycerides)
  • HDL subtype (there are five HDL subtypes)
  • LDL subtype (there are seven LDL subtypes)
  • Homocysteine level (increases oxidative stress affecting endothelial function and causes vascular damage)
  • Lipoprotein(a)
  • Fasting insulin
  • High-sensitivity C-reactive protein (associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease)
  • Apoprotein B (high levels are associated with heart disease)
  • Apoprotein A1 (associated with HDL levels and protects against cardiovascular disease)
  • Fibrinogen (when associated with elevated LDL, the risk of cardiovascular disease is six times greater)
What makes an advanced lipid profile even more interesting and worthwhile is that not all of these risk factors are treated equally. While some of the genetic markers like KIF 6 (a protein involved in cellular transport) is treated with a statin, the majority of the inflammatory markers can be improved by optimizing lipids through a statin, niacin, a low glycemic diet, and exercise. Another example is Apolipoprotein E (APOE), which is associated with lipoprotein metabolism.  APOE has three major isoforms—ApoE2, ApoE3, and ApoE4. All three play a role in influencing the risk of cardiovascular disease. However, only ApoE4 has a significant role in developing atherosclerosis, Alzheimer’s disease, and impaired cognitive function. How is this genetic marker treated? The answer is a low fat nutrition plan with less than 20 percent fat calories. What’s disturbing is that conventional physicians measuring our cholesterol are quick to pull the trigger on prescribing powerful cholesterol lowering medications when sometimes all we need is a lifestyle change. Statins are now the number one selling class of drugs in the nation while new “super drugs” are created every day in an attempt to lower cholesterol numbers. At the same time, health care costs are jacked up billions of dollars as millions of new prescriptions are written every day. Sally Fallon, the president of the Weston A. Price Foundation, and Mary Enig, PhD, an expert in lipid biochemistry, have gone so far as to call high cholesterol “an invented disease,” a 'problem' that emerged when health professionals learned how to measure cholesterol levels in the blood."[iii] And this explanation is spot on. The sad truth is while more drugs are being prescribed and health care costs are skyrocketing, heart disease is still on a steady incline. In fact, statins have been shown to even increase the risk of heart failure. More studies are coming out showing just how unhealthy lowering cholesterol might be, particularly by the use of statin drugs. In fact, some people might actually be better off with high cholesterol levels. Remember, cholesterol plays a major role in repairing damaged cells. Could it possibly be that individuals with high levels of cholesterol also have high levels of inflammation? Here’s a news flash—you have high cholesterol because your immune system is damaged from all the refined carbohydrates, processed meat, and trans fats that you've been eating. The cholesterol is there to do a job—help your body heal and repair.

Treat disease not symptoms

The increasing cost of health care is a perfect example of doctors treating the symptoms, not the disease. These “super drugs” don't address the fundamental source of heart disease. Taking a pill won't fix the problems that are pushing us along the steady incline to pathology. After all, we can't spell the word pathology without the word path, and thepath we've been following to cure heart disease has been negligent. Cholesterol has officially mushroomed into a trillion dollar business that has comprised the lives of almost everyone. Heck, why doesn’t McDonald’s just start including statins with every purchase of a Happy Meal? Now that’s a way to lower health care! Seeing the opportunity, Big Pharma did a really good job of scaring us to death about foods that our ancestors have thrived on for eons. We're being told to limit our consumption of foods such as eggs, chicken, fish, and nuts because they're high in cholesterol or worse—go on statins to reduce our blood cholesterol. This is blasphemous! Dietary cholesterol from raw, naturally occurring whole foods isn't even close to being the culprit. Our bodies produce three to four times more cholesterol than the cholesterol intake we receive from our diets. Are you still throwing away those egg yolks? I'll go out on a limb here and argue that we should consume more of these natural whole foods high in cholesterol and stop our consumption of processed fats, grains, sugar, and high fructose corn syrup. Maybe then our cholesterol levels will return to “normal.” We need to start becoming more educated on the relationship between cholesterol and heart disease. We need to become more prudent and thorough with our blood tests. We need to understand the difference between a symptom-based plan and a foundational, lifestyle change.  It’s time to finally admit it—cholesterol isn'tthe major culprit in heart disease. So there you have it, the reasons why high cholesterol is a worry that many of us simply don't need to have. I urge everyone to try making a few lifestyle changes before risking your health with cholesterol lowering drugs. Exposing the cholesterol scam and pinpointing the real cause and solution for heart disease needs to happen now. To sum it up, I'll leave everyone with eight tips that I picked up from Dr. Joseph Mercola on how to naturally lower cholesterol.

How to lower your cholesterol naturally

1. Make sure you’re getting plenty of high quality, animal-based omega 3 fats. I prefer those from krill oil. New research suggests that as little as 500 mg may lower your total cholesterol and triglycerides and will likely increase your HDL cholesterol. 2. Reduce, with the plan of eliminating, grains and sugars in your daily diet. It's especially important to eliminate dangerous sugars such as fructose. If your HDL/cholesterol ratio is abnormal and needs to be improved, it would also serve you well to virtually eliminate fruits from your diet, as those are also a source of fructose. Once your cholesterol improves, you can gradually reintroduce it to levels that don’t raise your cholesterol. 3. Eat a good portion of your food raw. 4. Eat healthy, preferably raw, fats that correspond to your nutritional type. These include:
  • Olive oil
  • Coconut and coconut oil
  • Organic raw dairy products (including butter, cream, sour cream, and cheese)
  • Avocados
  • Raw nuts
  • Seeds
  • Eggs (lightly cooked with yolks intact or raw)
  • Organic, grass-fed meats
5. Get the right amount of exercise. When you exercise, you increase your circulation and the blood flow throughout your body. The components of your immune system are also better circulated, which means your immune system has a better chance of fighting an illness before it has the opportunity to spread. 6. Avoid smoking and drinking excessive amounts of alcohol. 7. Address your emotional challenges. I particularly love the emotional freedom technique (EFT) for stress management.

 

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Yolks!

egg-yolk

In the last few decades, the egg, one of nature’s most nourishing and original whole foods (no matter which came first) has been the victim of the anti-fat and anti-cholesterol health craze based on poor theory and unjustified conclusions. The egg is nature’s perfect food. It has the ideal combination of proteinfatvitamins, and minerals. No food really corresponds exactly with the body’s required amino acid pattern, but the amino acids in eggs come closest. All of these nutrients are found in the yolk. In fact, the slew of nutrients in an egg yolk is so comprehensive that a few a day would offer better insurance than a multivitamin. So it baffles me that anyone in their right mind would just want to eat egg whites!  Only eating egg whites is like slapping Mother Nature in the face and spitting on millions of years’ worth of evolution. The reason why the yolk gets a bad rap is because of its content of fat and cholesterol.
“But the yolks contain over five grams of fat!”
Let me be the first one to tell you that the fat in an egg yolk is mostly polyunsaturated and monounsaturated, both of which are healthy fats. In fact, healthy fats should make up 20 percent of your diet! The low fat myth was supposed to have ended in the 90s, so it drives me crazy when people still fear something like egg yolks. The percentage of calories from fat that you eat, whether high or low, isn’t really linked with disease. What really matters is the type of fat you eat. Fat itself isn’t the culprit. The processing of fat is and the less processed and refined a food is, the easier the body can break it down.
“But yolks are fill with cholesterol!”
Another myth is that the cholesterol in the yolk will leave you with gooey, sticky junk in your arteries. The truth is, however, that there isn’t any direct connection between the amount of cholesterol you eat and the concentration of cholesterol in your blood. Let me also tell you that labeling someone with high or low cholesterol isn’t as accurate a risk factor as you may believe. A new national study has shown that nearly 75 percent of patients hospitalized for a heart attack had cholesterol levels that would indicate they weren’t at high risk for a cardiovascular event based on current national cholesterol guidelines.   How can something so right be so wrong? We’ve been told for decades that eggs increase cholesterol, which then increases our risk for heart disease. We have been told that eggs contain too much fat, which will increase our chances of heart disease, diabetes, and obesity. You see, when you toss away the egg yolk, 100 percent of the fat soluble vitamins are lost. That’s a large serving of vitamins A, D, E, K, and carotenoids. These fat soluble vitamins do more things than you could imagine. They boost your immune system; reduce your risk of cancer; keep your bones, teeth, and skin healthy; support the thyroid gland; reduce the damaging effects of diabetes; and promote healthy growth in children to list a few. Now, I’m not telling you to go on an egg splurge like Gaston from Beauty and the Beast to catch up on your years of being a “yolk a phobe.” But please give your body the favor and nourishment of providing it with natures most simple yet most powerful food of all. Don’t forget the yolk!
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