Paul Saladino· MD
in general hdl levels do associate with metabolic health meaning that those who have lower levels of hdl that's often seen in metabolic dyslipidemia
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
in general hdl levels do associate with metabolic health meaning that those who have lower levels of hdl that's often seen in metabolic dyslipidemia
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if you have a metabolic dysfunction and your HDL is low those usually go hand in hand that is a big risk factor and that is what is causing the problem
there is another variable and that variable is metabolic function metabolic Health metabolic health is reflected by HDL you guys if your HDL is low not always but a lot of the time in the general population that is associated with metabolic syndrome and there are many studies to show this
isolated low hdl cholesterol an insulin resistant state this is really well known uh insulin levels during an oral glucose tolerance test were significantly higher in the low hdl group than in the control group it's a pretty clear indication of metabolic unhealth metabolic dysfunction in that group if you have an isolated low hdl not always sometimes it's genetic but often it's an indication of metabolic unhealth metabolic dysfunction