Cholesterol: How Low Is Low?
New Guidelines For Heart Patients Significantly Revise 'Safe' Levels
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Play CBS Video Video New Cholesterol Guidelines How low can you go? That's the question when it comes to cholesterol, as doctors dramatically lower the LDL amount that's believed to be heart-healthy. Elizabeth Kaledin reports on the new guidelines.
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Video Keeping Cholesterol In Check
New guidelines recommend that people at risk for heart attacks or strokes should lower their LDL, or 'bad cholesterol.' The Early Show's Dr. Emily Senay has more.
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(AP/CBS)
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Interactive Heart Disease Learn more about different types of heart disease, explore different treatments and assess your own risk.
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Interactive Diet And Nutrition Are you eating right? See the government's guidelines, calculate your body mass index and quiz yourself on healthy food choices.
"The concept here is that lower is better with respect to cholesterol," says Dr. Steven Nissen, cardiologist at the Cleveland Clinic, who is among those who have studied the issue. "It'll be hard to get there, but we do have aggressive drugs."
"If there were a motto for the new guidelines," reports CBS News Correspondent Elizabeth Kaledin, "it might be something like: 'How low can you go?' They take numbers once thought good enough - and lower them significantly."
The new numbers, reports Kaledin, mean millions of Americans may have to take statin drugs - which block the formation of statin - for the rest of their lives.
Some cardiac patients take statins in combination with other prescription drugs which block cholesterol's uptake by the body.
So, does this advice apply to you?
Better find out, says the study's lead author, Dr. Scott Grundy of the Center for Human Nutrition, at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.
"We hope that people will go to their doctors and say where do I stand?," says Grundy. "Do I need to take a medication? How do I need to change my diet? Am I being treated appropriately?"
The new guideline for very high-risk heart patients is lowering their so-called bad cholesterol, LDL, to 70. The previous guideline was 100.
Risk factors for heart attack include smoking, high blood pressure, diabetes and obesity.
The new guidelines, in Monday's issue of the American Heart Association journal Circulation, are not a complete surprise. Recent studies have shown that lives can be saved by a drastic lowering of LDL in people who have had recent heart attacks.
Created by the National Cholesterol Education Program, the guidelines are endorsed by the American Heart Association, the American College of Cardiology and the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. A panel of the education program examined five major studies involving cholesterol-lowering medicines.
"By doing this we expect further reduction of death from heart disease, as well as heart attacks, and the need for expensive re-vascularization procedures like bypass surgery and coronary angioplasty," says Dr. Sidney Smith, a co-author, former president of the American Heart Association and professor of medicine at the University of North Carolina. "I think that the majority of patients - based on the studies - should be able to achieve these goals."
Every year, 1.2 million people in America have a new or repeat heart attack. Grundy says that as of 2001 there were about 36 million people who could benefit from drugs to lower their cholesterol. He adds that it's hard to put a number on it, but the new guidelines could increase that number by "a few million."
The LDL guideline - or option, according to Smith - of 70 is for people who have just had a heart attack or those who already have cardiovascular disease plus diabetes, are persistent smokers and have high blood pressure, or other multiple risk factors.
Grundy says the updated recommendations call for drug therapy in almost all high-risk patients with levels of LDL higher than 100.
For moderately high-risk people - those who have multiple risk factors and are estimated to have a 10 percent to 20 percent chance of heart attack or cardiac death within 10 years - the new guidelines reinforce the need for treatment if LDL levels are 130 or higher and add an optional consideration of drug therapy if levels are between 100-129.
The guidelines have not changed for those in the lower to moderate risk categories. Grundy says those in the low risk category should be keeping their LDL level at 160 or lower and moderate risk patients should be keeping it at 130 or lower.
Dr. James Cleeman, coordinator of the National Cholesterol Education Program at the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, stresses that patients should also be doing things like eating a diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol, exercising and keeping their weight under control.
The recommendations will be refined further as other studies are completed.
İMMIV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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