Hi,
I was watching the July 2015 CBC Marketplace, youtube video, on 10 "healthy" food labels, exposed.
When an (orange) juice company claimed that their Oasis Health Break Cholestprevent juice (mango cranberry flavoured orange juice) contained 2 g or sterols.
To make their product seem a better choice of plant sterol, they claimed that 80 oranges = 2 g plant sterol.
Oasis orange juice with 80 oranges or 22 kg broccoli equals 2 g of plant sterols..JPG
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=opwBw-O_UaY
That got me thinking.
If you guys are chugging down 40 oranges a day, in 2 days you would reach 2 g plant sterol?
Would you not be having too much plant sterols in the long run?
Is plant sterol good or bad?
That product, seems to say plant sterol is good at preventing cholesterol.{probably by having plant sterol take up more territory in the body than cooked-meat sterol in avg SAD ppl.}.
But isn't that bad? bad to have plant sterols? Because cholesterol is viewed as good in this forum.
The question is, are you guys filling up on too much plant sterols?
And what about this table?
Plant sterols Hamilton Health Science Feb 2017 Table of food items.JPG
Seems like there are ways to easily eat a quantity of plant sterols.
From these dates CBC's Marketplace in July 2015, and Hamilton Health Science's Feb 2017, table, the anti-cholesterol fad is still alive and running, despite the publication that reversed 50 years of anti-cholesterol advice. It is now promoted in the form of pro ingestion of plant-sterols.
While the real evil lies in statin drugs.
Is plant-sterol just dragged into promote anti-cholesterol?
OR is plant-sterol, actually also part of the equation of cholesterol alteration in the body?
If it is, is it bad? Should we stick to the body making cholesterol, and avoid exogenous sterols such as plant-sterols, and meat-sterols, and cooked-meat sterols.
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