Colesterol and statins

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Good for you, but I think it's rare for no diet to lower it. I can't lower it enough, but diet still does something, so I do as much as I reasonably can anyway (oat bran, stanols, brazil nuts, olive oil, ...), in the hope of lower doses meaning lower risk of side-effects from the drugs that I have yet to exhaust. Exercise seems to have about the same effect as diet, which is a reason why I cycle.

Depends what is meant by genetic. I have high lipoprotein a - I call this the 3rd type of chlostrel after LDL + HDL.

You probably won't have had this checked. Because there is currently nothing that can be done to lower it (no real treatments yet available) .

However it is a dangerous marker in its own right. It's totally genetic - diet and exercise won't budge it.

Some new treatments for high Lipoprotein a are very close to release - hopefully these will be available in the UK soon.
 

presta

Legendary Member
I know numerous people who have been offered statins but with no real medical reason.
GPs to be incentivised to prescribe statins.
 

mjr

Comfy armchair to one person & a plank to the next
When I looked into things last year when it was suggested that I start taking statins despite my excellent cholesterol levels I discovered that my 75th birthday had me crossing a threshold where the criteria changes.
That shouldn't be happening now. It used to happen because the QRISK2 heart attack risk calculation was developed for ages 35-74, so it couldn't really be part of the criteria for 75+, but QRISK3 was published in 2017 and covers ages 25-84. If your doctor or care board was last year still using criteria rooted in the limitations of a pre-2017 risk calculator, they need to bring themselves up to date! Can you share the detail of the criteria, such as where you found them?

But even using the latest risk calculations, it basically becomes more and more difficult to avoid a statin suggestion as you age.

I'm worried that this may be a medication that discourages physical activity (due to adverse events being more likely if you exercise) being given to people who should exercise enough, which would be a bit of an own goal.
 

Tenkaykev

Guru
Location
Poole
That shouldn't be happening now. It used to happen because the QRISK2 heart attack risk calculation was developed for ages 35-74, so it couldn't really be part of the criteria for 75+, but QRISK3 was published in 2017 and covers ages 25-84. If your doctor or care board was last year still using criteria rooted in the limitations of a pre-2017 risk calculator, they need to bring themselves up to date! Can you share the detail of the criteria, such as where you found them?

But even using the latest risk calculations, it basically becomes more and more difficult to avoid a statin suggestion as you age.

I'm worried that this may be a medication that discourages physical activity (due to adverse events being more likely if you exercise) being given to people who should exercise enough, which would be a bit of an own goal.

Doesn't time fly. I just checked my NHS records and it shows that it was in fact September 2023. I wasn't 75 until may of the following year. There were several readings such as " total cholesterol HDL ratio 3.1 " total cholesterol measurement 3.8, serum HDL 1.2 " which I took to be ok. I still run and walk regularly and have followed a vegetarian diet for more than 60 years, drink occassionally but not to excess. I can see where there might be some concern as I'm chronically anaemic so the low blood oxygen acts as a limiter on physical activity and sort of self regulates my pace and endurance.
 
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