High Cholesterol Symptoms

The ironic thing about high cholesterol symptoms is that there aren’t any. You don’t feel any better or worse and don’t show any obvious signs, until you have a heart attack.

With over 1,000 people daily dying from heart disease in the US alone and more throughout the world the need to combat heart disease is more important than ever. And high cholesterol is one of the major risk factors associated with heart disease.

And while you cannot consider these to be high cholesterol symptoms, there are warning signs that you should look out for, including:

  • Poor or high-fat diet
  • Overweight
  • Age (your cholesterol levels start to rise over age 20)
  • Smoking
  • A sedentary lifestyle
  • Family history of high cholesterol

There is only one way to see if you have high cholesterol and that is through a blood test. When you have a physical exam, you will fast before the exam to insure that the readings are accurate and then your doctor will draw several small vials of blood.

The test results will come back measuring your cholesterol in four key areas:

  • Total cholesterol
  • HDL cholesterol- this is your high-density lipoprotein count. HDL’s are your good cholesterol, which cleans the walls of your arteries preventing atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries).
  • LDL cholesterol-this is your low-density lipoprotein count. LDL’s are your bad cholesterol. This causes the plaque that sticks to the walls of your arteries causing atherosclerosis.
  • Triglycerides-a type of fat that accounts for most of the fats in your body.

The results of this blood test will be the only high cholesterol symptom you will ever receive.

I have the results of the test listed below:

Normal Cholesterol Level Chart

Cholesterol Range

Classification

Remarks

Less Than 200

Good

Low Risk of Coronary Artery Disease

200-239

Borderline High

Possible Risk of Coronary Artery Disease

240 and above

High

Double the Risk of Coronary Artery Disease than those in the normal range

Normal HDL Cholesterol Chart

Cholesterol Range

Classification

Remarks

60 or above

Good

Good protection against coronary artery disease

Less than 50 (for women)

High risk

Possibility of developing coronary artery disease

Less than 40

High Risk

Possibility of developing coronary artery disease

Normal LDL Cholesterol Chart

Cholesterol Range

Classification

Remarks

Less than 100

Excellent

Very low risk of coronary artery disease

100-129

Good

Low risk of coronary artery disease

130-159

Borderline high

Increasing risk of developing coronary artery disease

160 and above

High

High risk of developing coronary artery disease

Normal Triglyceride Levels

Triglyceride Range

Classification

Below 150 mg/dL

Excellent

150-199 mg/dL

Borderline High

200-499 mg/dL

High

Over 500 mg/dL

Very High

If your doctor analyzes your cholesterol results and any of the following occur:

  • Total cholesterol is too high
  • HDL cholesterol too low
  • LDL cholesterol too high
  • Triglycerides are too high

Your doctor will recommend a combination of lifestyle changes which could include:

  • More exercise
  • Low saturated fat diet
  • Medications to reduce your cholesterol, known as statins

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