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Ginger and Cholesterol: HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibition (Same Target as Statins)

A meta-analysis of 12 RCTs (Mazidi 2016) found ginger reduces total cholesterol by 12 mg/dL and triglycerides by 11 mg/dL. The mechanism? Same enzyme target as statins.

Three Lipid-Lowering Mechanisms

1. HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibition

6-gingerol inhibits HMG-CoA reductase — the same enzyme that statins target. This reduces hepatic cholesterol synthesis in a dose-dependent manner.

2. Cholesterol-to-Bile-Acid Conversion

Ginger activates 7α-hydroxylase → increases cholesterol conversion to bile acids → accelerated elimination via feces.

3. Reduced Intestinal Absorption

Ginger reduces dietary cholesterol absorption in the small intestine → less cholesterol enters the bloodstream.

The Sugar-Triglyceride Link

Excess fructose is converted to triglycerides by the liver (de novo lipogenesis). A 33g-sugar ginger shot directly raises triglycerides — the exact opposite of what you want.

INTI — 1.1g sugar. The ginger works on your cholesterol without adding lipid load via sugar.

⚠️ Ginger does NOT replace statins. Consult your cardiologist.


When a natural compound targets the same enzyme as a billion-dollar drug class, the research deserves funding.

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