| Eat some Cheerios asap |
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Nephew lucky lived in a time where he got statins.
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Cheerios raised my triglycerides. |
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Why are you not being followed by a physician?
Seems crazy that you are not better about maintaining your health. Trust me, you are at an age where a quality primary care provider could add decades to your life (vs farming out your future health to DCUM??!!) |
But only the heart~shaped ones. No offense but at your advanced age you have only about 10 good years left ~ you can have more if you stay away from beef and opt for lentils, avocado and even certain types of fish. |
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Absolutely, but do not just get statins from your PC. Please see a cardiologist, and if possible a female one (I LOVE my doc--she is super proactive).
Leading cause of death for women over 50 (assuming you are female) is heart disease. Also, you need a full slate of tests--not just basic levels, but the size of your LDL is important, as well as a calcium score, ac1, etc. I have low trigylcerides, but my LDL, even with statins, is around 100. She wants me at 60, given family history. Unfortunately I am in the somewhat statin-resistant club and may move to a PSK9 inhibitor; I am also doing hormone replacement for cardiac benefits (studies suggest cardiac benefits) and take a lot of fish oil. Also, I have always been an exerciser and never overweight. Currently I am 120#, exercise 4-5x week and eat well, mostly mediterranean (but not perfectly, I do have some ice cream and cheese but avoid a lot of other crap), on statins and still LDL is borderline high and it needs to be low, given my family history and calcium score. |
You don't understand actuarial tables. |
| @10:04 poster- who is your doctor you love? |
That is too low to be on a statin, unless other factors you didn’t disclose. |
+100 make sure to test lipoprotein a, ApoB, and LDL particle count. These 3 biomarkers are arguably superior predictors of cardiac/vascular risk. Major Canadian and European medical organizations already recommend testing these biomarkers as a standard practice of care. You can order direct labs online to test for this in most states. LDL and total cholesterol are also very good predictors of ASCVD risk, but the three biomarkers that I mentioned help to refine the estimate of risk. APOB and LDL-P are also useful predictors of residual risk after you start taking cholesterol medication. Sometimes these biomarkers don’t decline as much as your LDL mg/dL (after medication), which can indicate that you still need more aggressive treatment to minimize risk. Dont listen to the people that are saying you don’t need cholesterol medication or that you can fix your cholesterol issues entirely with diet/lifestyle. They are just wrong. Your TC is above the 95th percentile (for your age) and it’s exceedingly unlikely that diet/lifestyle can fix this problem. Furthermore, if your cholesterol has been high for years you need more aggressive treatment to mitigate future risk of cardiac events because decades of damage have likely accumulated already. The lipid hypothesis is one of the most well-validated and researched topics in medicine. The evidence is almost unequivocal that more cholesterol = higher risk of cardiovascular disease. Don't listen to the uninformed people that say otherwise. I would recommend reading articles, books, or watching videos published by Dr. Thomas Dayspring or Dr. Paddy Barrett to learn more about this topic. |
PP who had a cholesterol of 405 and LDL of something like 320. I got the alarming lab result after seeing a cardiologist following a referral from the ER that diagnosed me with heart failure. No call from the cardiologist, so I went to my PCP whom I hadn't seen for years. He, but not the cardiologist, suspected this could be a kidney, not a heart issue, and that was confirmed with a simple urinalysis. The to a hammer everything looks like a nail thinking applies to cardiologists as well. Every high cholesterol must be caused by a heart problem. But this is not always true. With really high cholesterol, it is important to find the underlying cause. With treatment for the kidney disease, statins, and zetia I now have cholesterol of 125 and LDL of 38. |
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Are you on prescription medication?
Because oftentimes people see their cholesterol numbers rise as side effects from certain medications. Specifically antidepressants. |
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Get on a statin. I am on the lowest dose. No side effects. I eat healthy, no weight to lose. I have bad genes, and 57 years old.
Go make an appointment today! |
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Please explore the Portfolio Diet. It's not a calorie counting type diet, rather a "portfolio" of foods that have a proven benefit to lowering cholesterol. I made the switch to eating hulless barley, lentils, apples, sweet potatoes, and cut out the obvious high saturated fat items like butter and bacon and my LDL cholesterol dropped by 50+ points.
TBH, the question is whether one can maintain that kind of diet or if it's just easier to go on a statin. But, this diet definitely did work for me in less than 3 months. |
Your nephew has a bad cholesterol gene from both parents and is lucky to still be alive. The OP probably has a bad gene from one parent and needs to be on statins yesterday. |