Having a ānormalā cholesterol level in a society where itās normal to die from a heart attack isnāt necessarily a good thing.
āConsistent evidenceā from a variety of sources āunequivocally establishesā that so-called bad LDL cholesterol causes atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseaseāstrokes and heart attacks, our leading cause of death. This evidence base includes hundreds of studies involving millions of people. āCholesterol is the cause of atherosclerosis,ā the hardening of the arteries, and āthe message is loud and clear.ā āItās the Cholesterol, Stupid!ā noted the editor of the American Journal of Cardiology, William Clifford Roberts, whose CV is more than 100 pages long as he has published about 1,700 articles in peer-reviewed medical literature. Yes, there are at least ten traditional risk factors for atherosclerosis, as seen below and at 1:11 in my video How Low Should You Go for Ideal LDL Cholesterol?, but, as Dr. Roberts noted, only one is required for the progression of the disease: elevated cholesterol.
Your doctor may have just told you that your cholesterol is normal, so youāre relieved. Thank goodness! But, having a ānormalā cholesterol level in a society where itās normal to have a fatal heart attack isnāt necessarily good. With heart disease, the number one killer of men and women, we definitely donāt want to have normal cholesterol levels; we want to have optimal levelsāand not optimal by current laboratory standards, but optimal for human health.
Normal LDL cholesterol levels are associated with the hidden buildup of atherosclerotic plaques in our arteries, even in those who have so-called āoptimal risk factors by current standardsā: blood pressure under 120/80, normal blood sugars, and total cholesterol under 200 mg/dL. If you went to your doctor with those kinds of numbers, youād likely get a gold star and a lollipop. But, if your doctor used ultrasound and CT scans to actually peek inside your body, atherosclerotic plaques would be detected in about 38% of individuals with those kinds of āoptimalā numbers.
Maybe we should define an LDL cholesterol level as optimal only when it no longer causes disease. What a concept! When more than a thousand men and women in their 40s were scanned, having an LDL level under 130 mg/dL left them with atherosclerosis throughout their body, and thatās a cholesterol level at which most lab tests would consider normal.
In fact, atherosclerotic plaques were not found with LDL levels down around 50 or 60, which just so happens to be the levels most people had ābefore the introduction of western lifestyles.ā Indeed, before we started eating a typical American diet, āthe majority of the adult population of the world had LDLs of around 50 mg per deciliter (mg/dL)āāso thatās the true normal. āPresent average valuesā¦should not be regarded as ānormal.āā We donāt want to have a normal cholesterol based on a sick society; we want a cholesterol that is normal for the human species, which may be down around 30 to 70 mg/dL or 0.8 to 1.8 mmol/L.
āAlthough an LDL level of 50 to 70 mg/dl seems excessively low by modern American standards, it is precisely the normal range for individuals living the lifestyle and eating the diet for which we are genetically adapted.ā Over millions of years, āthrough the evolution of the ancestors of man,ā weāve consumed a diet centered around whole plant foods. No wonder we have a killer epidemic of atherosclerosis, given the LDL level āwe were āgenetically designed forā is less than half of what is presently considered ānormal.āā
In medicine, āthere is an inappropriate tendency to accept small changes in reversible risk factors,ā but āthe goal is not to decrease risk but to prevent atherosclerotic plaques!ā So, how low should you go? āIn light of the latest evidence from trials exploring the beneļ¬ts and risks of profound LDLc lowering, the answer to the question āHow low do you go?ā is, arguably, a straightforward āAs low as you can!āā āāLowerā may indeed be better,ā but if youāre going to do it with drugs, then you have to balance that with the risk of the drugās side effects.
Why donāt we just drug everyone with statins, by putting them in the water supply, for instance? Although it would be great if everyoneās cholesterol were lower, there are the countervailing risks of the drugs. So, doctors aim to use statin drugs at the highest dose possible, achieving the largest LDL cholesterol reduction possible without increasing risk of the muscle damage the drugs may cause. But when youāre using lifestyle changes to bring down your cholesterol, all you get are the benefits.
Can we get our LDL low enough with diet alone? Ask some of the countryās top cholesterol experts what they shoot for, āand the odds are good that many will say 70 or so.ā So, yes, we should try to avoid the saturated fats and trans fats found in junk foods and meat, and the dietary cholesterol found mostly in eggs, but āit is unlikely anyone can achieve an LDL cholesterol level of 70 mg/dL with a low-fat, low-cholesterol diet alone.ā Really? Many doctors have this mistaken impression. An LDL of 70 isnāt only possible on a healthy enough diet, but it may be normal. Those eating strictly plant-based diets can average an LDL that low, as you can see here and at 5:28 in my video.

No wonder plant-based diets are the only dietary patterns ever proven to reverse coronary heart disease in a majority of patients. And their side effects? You get to feel better, too! Several randomized clinical trials have demonstrated that more plant-based dietary patterns signiļ¬cantly improve psychological well-being and quality of life, with improvements in depression, anxiety, emotional well-being, physical well-being, and general health.
For more on cholesterol, see the related posts below.

