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Determine your daily calorie needs by multiplying as follows.

Most men and very active women:
Current weight in pounds ____ x 15 = ____ daily calories

Inactive men and most women:
Current weight in pounds ____ x 13 = ____ daily calories

If you want to lose weight:
Current weight in pounds ____ x 10 = ____ daily calories

The ancient herb red clover (Trifolium pratense), long used to ease estrogen-related menopausal symptoms, has now been found to significantly increase HDL (good) cholesterol levels in postmenopausal women.

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Nutrition

Cholesterol Lowering Foods

It is claimed that dozens of foods have a cholesterol lowering effect. But there is nothing like a magic food. Most of them need to be eaten in multiple servings to be of any effect. Seafood:Though some studies found that fatty fish, like salmon and sardines, lower total and blood vessel-damaging LDL cholesterol levels (often called the “bad” cholesterol), this has been disputed by others. Still, eating fish a couple times a week is a better choice than a saturated-fat-rich piece of steak.
Salmon Sardine
Garlic: Garlic which had a reputation of being a cholesterol lowering effect has got a lot of bad press when two well-designed studies found that ingesting the equivalent of one to one and a half cloves a day, taken as supplements, didn’t make a dent in total or LDL cholesterol, nor did it affect cholesterol metabolism. While some experts still claim that whole garlic cloves may reduce cholesterol levels, critics like Dr. Tu Nguyen, assistant professor of medicine at the Mayo Medical School, are unequivocal. “Garlic’s been well studied,” Dr. Nguyen says, “and it doesn’t lower cholesterol.” Garlic

Fruits and Vegetables: Certain fruits and vegetables are particularly rich in pectin, a soluble fiber that may help lower total and LDL cholesterol. It does its job by trapping cholesterol-containing bile acids in the intestine and ushering them out of the body. The problem is you need to eat a lot — the equivalent of six large apples a day — to get maximum benefit. Nonetheless, Pat Streicher, dietitian manager at the Jewish Hospital Cholesterol Center in Cincinnati, suggests getting three to four servings a day of water-soluble fiber foods, such as citrus fruits (especially the inner white rind), apples, berries, carrots, apricots, dates, figs, prunes, cabbage, Brussels sprouts and sweet potatoes.

Citrus Fruits Prunes Dried Plums Sweet Potatoes
Apples Carrots Cabbage
Apricots Figs Dates

Beans: Lima, kidney, black beans and other legumes are loaded with soluble fiber that can help curb cholesterol levels. Studies have found that eating 1½ cups of cooked beans a day can cause significant dips in total and LDL cholesterol levels. “Beans figure prominently in lowering cholesterol,” says Cyndi Reeser, lead nutritionist at George Washington University Lipid Research Center. “I highly recommend them several times a week, if not daily.”

Lima Beans Kidney Beans Black Beans

Nuts: Nuts are loaded with fat and calories. Yet, in several studies, eating 2 to 4 ounces a day significantly reduced total and LDL cholesterol levels. Scientists speculate these benefits may come from poly- and monounsaturated fats, which can lower cholesterol when substituted for saturated fat, and several phytochemicals, like plant sterols, that can inhibit cholesterol absorption. Almond, walnuts and pistachios are said to benefit in lowering cholesterol.

Almonds Walnuts Pistachios nuts