Has anyone in good faith actually seen cardio and diet affect LDL levels? Outside of going from 300 pounds to 180 or something. I'm talking about an already relatively fit man who exercises regularly and eats a diet relatively low in saturated fats. I cannot say that I honestly believe it makes much difference and most of this is genetics and AAS induced in the already active populations.I'll go from 3x30 min cardio a week to 180 min a week. My diet is fairly good already anyway.
I'll report back.
The most hilarious "plan of action" I got for years and years from my PCP walking around with 150 LDL levels building a 175 CAC score was to "eat more leafy green vegetables and walking for 30 minutes per day". Hello bruh I do 25000 steps a day, 3 cardio sessions weekly, resistance train 5 days a week and eat 4-6 servings of vegetables a day. I'm not eating pizza and ice cream 3x a day.
Then again there are entire forums devoted to athletes who never touched AAS who have crazy CAC scores due to insane weekly MET hours. So who the F knows.
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