Introduction | Anatomy | Causes | Symptoms | Diagnosis | Treatment | Prevention | Am I at Risk | Complications
Introduction
High cholesterol occurs when there is too much or an unhealthy balance of cholesterol in the blood. Your body needs some cholesterol for healthy functioning but too much is dangerous to your health. High cholesterol has no symptoms. The only way to find out if you have high cholesterol is to get tested with a simple blood test. High cholesterol is treated with lifestyle changes, dietary changes, and medications. Untreated high cholesterol increases the risk for heart and blood vessel disease, including heart attack and stroke.
Anatomy
Cholesterol is a fat-like substance that is essential to your health. You obtain cholesterol from the foods that you eat, but the majority of cholesterol is produced by your liver. Cholesterol is a component in your blood, cells, and body tissues. Your brain, nerves, muscles, skin, liver, intestines, and heart use it to function. Your body uses cholesterol to produce hormones, vitamin D, and bile that helps to digest fat. Cholesterol helps your nerves and brain send messages. Cholesterol is also a component of body fat. Your body needs cholesterol to be healthy; however, too much cholesterol is dangerous to your health.
A total cholesterol test shows the total amount of cholesterol in your blood. A more detailed test, a lipid profile, includes lipoprotein measurements that are more useful and reflective of your health. Cholesterol travels out from your liver and into your bloodstream on fat and protein carriers called lipoproteins. The two main types are low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol.
Most cholesterol is LDL. LDLs transport cholesterol away from the liver and into the bloodstream. LDLs contain more fat than protein. LDLs are more likely to collect on the walls of blood vessels, which can contribute to heart disease, including heart attack and stroke. LDLs are the “bad” cholesterol. To help people remember, the “L” in LDL is commonly referred to as “lousy.” You want your LDL numbers to be low.
HDL cholesterol contains more protein than fat. HDLs carry cholesterol away from your arteries and out of your body. High HDL levels can reduce the risk of heart attack. HDLs are the “good” cholesterol. The “H” in HDL is commonly referred to as “healthy.” You want your HDL levels to be high.
Causes
Symptoms
Diagnosis
Total Cholesterol (mg/dL) | Status |
Less than 200 | Desirable |
200-239 | Borderline High |
Greater than 240 | High |
LDL Cholesterol (mg/dL) | |
Less than 100 | Optimal |
100-129 | Near Optimal/Above Optimal |
130-159 | Borderline High |
160-189 | High |
Greater than 190 | Very High |
HDL Cholesterol (mg/dL) | |
Less than 40 for men, Less than 50 for women | Low |
Greater than 60 | High/Desirable |
Triglycerides (mg/dL) | |
Less than 150 | Normal |
150-199 | Borderline High |
200-499 | High |
500 or Higher | Very High |
Treatment
Prevention
You may be able to reduce the risk factors for high cholesterol that you can control. Lifestyle changes, such as not smoking; eating a low fat, low cholesterol, and high fiber diet; maintaining a healthy weight; and getting regular exercise can help reduce your risk for high cholesterol. Cholesterol lowering medications can reduce your cholesterol to healthy levels and lower your risk for heart disease. You should make and attend all of your follow up appointments with your doctor.
Am I at Risk
There are risk factors for high cholesterol that you can and cannot control. You can reduce your risk for high cholesterol by eliminating the risk factors that you can control.
Risk factors for high cholesterol:
- You cannot control the genes that you inherited from your parents. Your genes determine how fast your body produces and removes LDL.
- Some people have familial hypercholesterolemia, a specific form of high cholesterol that is inherited.
- Cholesterol levels tend to rise with age, with men experiencing an increase around age 45.
- Females tend to experience higher levels of cholesterol after menopause.
- Being overweight or obese is associated with an increased risk of high cholesterol.
- Smoking can increase cholesterol. People who smoke and have high cholesterol are at greater risk for heart disease and stroke.
- Excessive alcohol consumption can raise cholesterol levels.
- A sedentary lifestyle or lack of exercise increases the risk for high cholesterol.
- Certain medications, including birth control pills, estrogen, corticosteroids, some diuretics, and beta-blockers, may cause cholesterol levels to rise.
- Some medical conditions, such as liver disease, diabetes, Cushing’s syndrome, kidney disease, or an underactive thyroid, may contribute to high cholesterol.
- Eating food that is high in cholesterol or fat can increase your risk of developing high cholesterol. Foods that come from animals, such as meat, fish, poultry, shellfish, eggs, butter, cheese, and milk, contain cholesterol. Foods with saturated fats and trans fats, often found in margarine, baked goods, and processed foods, can raise cholesterol levels.