🧬 Understanding the Three Types
- HDL (High-Density Lipoprotein) – “Good cholesterol.” It helps remove excess cholesterol from the bloodstream and carries it to the liver for excretion.
- LDL (Low-Density Lipoprotein) – “Bad cholesterol.” High levels can deposit in artery walls, leading to blockages and heart disease.
- Triglycerides – A type of fat from excess calories, sugar, and alcohol. High levels are linked to fatty liver, diabetes, and heart problems.
✅ How to Manage Each
1. HDL (Increase It)
- Eat healthy fats: olive oil, avocados, nuts, seeds, fatty fish (salmon, sardine).
- Exercise regularly: brisk walking, cycling, swimming at least 30 mins/day.
- Quit smoking (if applicable) – it lowers HDL.
- Moderate alcohol (small red wine amounts can raise HDL, but avoid if you have fatty liver/diabetes).
2. LDL (Lower It)
- Cut saturated & trans fats: fried foods, bakery items, processed snacks, red meats.
- Increase fiber-rich foods: oats, barley, beans, fruits, and vegetables bind cholesterol.
- Use plant sterols/stanols (found in fortified foods and nuts) – they help block cholesterol absorption.
- Maintain healthy weight and avoid excess refined carbs.
3. Triglycerides (Lower It)
- Reduce sugar and refined carbs: sweets, white rice, maida, sugary drinks.
- Limit alcohol, as even small amounts can spike triglycerides.
- Choose lean proteins (chicken, fish, legumes) over fatty meats.
- Exercise consistently; weight loss has a strong impact on lowering triglycerides.
- Control blood sugar if diabetic (high sugar worsens triglycerides).
🌟 Summary
- Raise HDL with good fats + exercise.
- Lower LDL by cutting unhealthy fats + adding fiber.
- Control triglycerides by reducing sugar, alcohol, and excess calories.
👉 Since you have diabetes + fatty liver, your main focus should be lowering LDL & triglycerides, while keeping HDL at healthy levels.

