Apparently 75% of heart attacks occur in people with ‘safe’ cholesterol levels, so ‘safe’ levels should be lowered.
Other interpretations are available. Genuine question though, should I being reading irony into that? Because I don't think the good doc was intending that...
"Almost 75 percent of heart attack patients fell within recommended targets for LDL cholesterol, demonstrating that the current guidelines may not be low enough to cut heart attack risk in most who could benefit," said Dr. Gregg C. Fonarow, Eliot Corday Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine and Science at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and the study's principal investigator."
That seems like a definitive statement to me. Which kinda surprises me. Me, I can kinda see a 'maybe cholesterol has sod all to do with it' line too. I might even ponder who funded that particular piece of research.
Moving on.... revisiting this thread has given me cause for reflection.
I'm no longer on statins. Indeed, my stay on them was actually pretty brief. Once it had been ascertained that the prescribing cardiologist had got his numbers wrong somewhere/somehow, I came off them. And no doc has mentioned them since, despite my cholesterol levels flitting around, as ever, the borderline (my latest test nudged over at 5.95 mmoL/L ) Indeed, I notice that my blood test results no longer emphasise any incursion. Maybe current medical thinking has eased up? Dunno. I actually asked my doc specifically about the result and they said there wasn't a problem. So, if they're ok with it then so am I. Or then maybe the French state wants all us old gits to cark it because we're costing too much. I could see the sense in that too.