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High Blood Cholesterol
Go
to:
What is Blood
Cholesterol and Why Does It Matter?
What do Your Cholesterol Numbers Mean?
What Affects Your Blood Cholesterol Levels?
What If You Already Have Heart Disease?
What
is Blood Cholesterol and Why Does It Matter?
What
do Your Cholesterol Numbers Mean?
Classification:
Total and HDL-Cholesterol*
*These
levels are for anyone 20 years of age or older.
Risk
Factors for Heart Disease
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Factors
You Can Do Something About
- Cigarette
smoking
- High blood
cholesterol
(high total cholesterol and high LDL-cholesterol)
- Low HDL-cholesterol
- High blood
pressure
- Diabetes
- Obesity/overweight
- Physical
inactivity
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Factors
You Cannot Control
- Age:
45 years or older for men;
55 years or older for women
- Family
history of early heart disease
(heart attack or sudden death):
- Father
or brother stricken before the age of 55
- Mother
or sister stricken before the age of 65
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- HDL-cholesterol
is low,
- total cholesterol
is high,
OR
- total cholesterol
is borderline-high, and you have two or more other risk
factors for heart disease.
Your LDL level
gives a better picture of your risk for heart disease than
your total cholesterol. Here are the categories for LDL levels:
Classification:
LDL-Cholesterol*
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| Desirable |
Borderline-High
Risk |
High
Risk |
 |
 |
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Less than
130 mg/dL
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130-159
mg/dL
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160 mg/dL
or More
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*These
levels are for anyone 20 years or older without heart disease.
A person with heart disease should have an LDL level of 100
mg/dL or less.
Lowering LDL
is the main aim of treatment for a cholesterol problem. If your
LDL level puts you at high-risk and you have fewer than two
other risk factors for heart disease, then your treatment goal
is an LDL level of less than 160 mg/dL. However, if you have
two or more other risk factors for heart disease, your LDL goal
should be less than 130 mg/dL. If you already have heart disease,
your LDL should be even lower -- 100 mg/dL or less.
What
Affects Your Blood Cholesterol Levels?
Your blood cholesterol
levels are affected by:
- What you
eat-
The saturated fat and cholesterol in the food you eat raise
total and LDL-cholesterol levels.
- Overweight-
Being overweight can make your LDL-cholesterol level go
up and your HDL level go down.
- Physical
activity/exercise-
Increased physical activity helps to lower LDL-cholesterol
and raise HDL-cholesterol levels.
- Heredity-
Your body makes all the cholesterol it needs, and your genes
influence how your body makes and handles cholesterol.
- Age and gender-
Blood cholesterol levels in both men and women begin to
go up at about age 20. Women before menopause have levels
that are lower than men of the same age. After menopause,
a woman's LDL-cholesterol level goes up -- and so does her
risk for heart disease.
What
If You Already Have Heart Disease?
If you already
have heart disease, you have a great deal to gain by lowering
your cholesterol level. If you lower your blood cholesterol,
you can possibly prevent future heart attacks, and maybe even
slow down or reverse some of the cholesterol buildup in the
arteries. Remember, your LDL should be 100 mg/dL or less.
Previous:
Introduction | Next:
Chapter 2
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