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ApoB and Lipid Science

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The average American adult carries about 5.6 grams of cholesterol circulating in plasma at any given moment — roughly the weight of a U.S. nickel. Careful mass-balance modeling of what lipoprotein particles need for structural integrity, plus what specialized tissues actually draw from the bloodstream each day, suggests the body's true circulating requirement is closer to 1.5 to 2.7 grams. The two- to four-fold surplus isn't toxic in itself.
Imagine a man named John. John is 55 years old, active, and diligent about his health. He eats a Mediterranean diet and walks three miles every morning. At his last annual checkup, his doctor delivered what seemed like excellent news: his LDL cholesterol - the "bad" kind - was 80 mg/dL. In the world of standard medicine, that is a gold-star score. John felt invincible.
If your body were a blockbuster movie, cholesterol would be the character everyone loves to hate. We usually hear about it as the "villain" of the story—the bad guy responsible for heart trouble and clogged pipes. But if cholesterol is so truly "bad," why is it found in every single cell of your body? Why does your body work so hard to keep it around?
Imagine a doctor sitting in a dark room, peering through a powerful microscope at a tiny blob of yellow fat. For almost a hundred years, doctors looked at these blobs and thought they had found the "bad guy" causing heart disease. They called it cholesterol, and they believed that simply having too much of this "yellow grease" in your blood was the reason pipes in the body got clogged.
For decades, we have been told that a "normal" cholesterol level is the golden ticket to a healthy heart. But modern science has revealed a startling truth: what we once called "normal" was never actually healthy. In the 1960s, a total cholesterol level of 240 mg/dL was considered a standard, acceptable baseline for an adult. Today, a doctor would view that same number as an urgent health crisis.
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