On Thu, 13 May 2021 15:24:06 -0700, polygonum_on_google wrote:
On Thursday, 13 May 2021 at 16:48:41 UTC+1, GB wrote:
Vegetarians have more favorable levels of a number of biomarkers
including cardiovascular-linked ones total cholesterol, low-density
lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, and apolipoprotein A and B than
meat-eaters
Total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol concentrations for vegetarians
were 21% and 16.4% lower than in meat-eaters. But some biomarkers
considered beneficial including vitamin D concentrations were lower
in vegetarians, while some considered unhealthy including
triglycerides and cystatin-C levels were higher.
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/950911
So, it looks like you are all right! 
If my cholesterol were any lower, I'd be classed as
hypocholesterolaemic! I eat butter, cheese, meat, fish, ...
I suspect that thyroid hormone levels are more closely associated with
cholesterol levels than vegetarian/vegan/meat-eating.
Noting of course that more recent research suggests that higher
cholesterol levels can be beneficial when you get older, especially in
women.
Other research suggests that the amount of HDL is more important than LDL
(which can be good or bad LDL but this is not shown in the tests).
As usual, pick your statistics.
Cheers
Dave R
--
AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 7 Pro x64
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