Did you know?
India offers a growing number of private “Centers of excellence” where the quality of care is as good or better than that of big–city hospitals in the United States or Europe.
read more…
22 Specialties
Medical Education
Message Board
Ask the Doctor
PDF Print Home Back E-mail this page
 
Page 1 of 4

FAQs on Cholesterol

High Cholesterol
What is high cholesterol?
Cholesterol is a waxy substance found only in foods that come from animals. It is also manufactured by the body in the liver. You need small amounts of cholesterol to make and maintain nerve cells and to manufacture natural hormones.

When you have too much cholesterol in your bloodstream it is called hypercholesterolemia, or high cholesterol. Hypercholesterolemia increases your risk of heart disease.

The two most important components of cholesterol are low–density lipoprotein (LDL), the so–called “Bad” cholesterol, and high–density lipoprotein (HDL), the “Good” cholesterol. The goal of most cholesterol treatment is to decrease the LDL in your blood and to raise the HDL.

How does high cholesterol occur?
The most common cause of high cholesterol is eating foods that are high in saturated fat or cholesterol. Other possible causes are:
  • An inherited disorder in which cholesterol is not metabolized properly by the body.
  • A disease that raises the cholesterol level (for example, diabetes mellitus, kidney disease, liver disease, or hypothyroidism).
Excess cholesterol causes deposits to form inside blood vessels. These deposits, called plaque, are made of fats carried by the bloodstream. Atherosclerosis, a condition in which blood vessels become hardened and narrowed by the fatty deposits, may result. Atherosclerosis causes decreased blood flow. Blood clots may form in these narrowed vessels and totally stop blood flow. When this happens in the heart it causes a heart attack. Atherosclerosis causes more deaths from heart disease than any other single condition.

What are the symptoms?
Hypercholesterolemia is a silent disease. There are no symptoms until complications have already developed, such as the chest pain of a heart attack or calf pain with walking, caused by narrowed or blocked arteries to the legs.

How is it diagnosed?
The doctor will order a blood test to check your cholesterol level. These lab tests usually measure your total cholesterol level as well as the levels of LDL, HDL, and triglyceride in your blood.

You may need to fast before your blood test. This means you do not eat or drink anything except water for 12 hours before the test.

The doctor may give you a physical exam and ask about your diet and diseases and health problems in your family.


Quote this article in website  Favoured  Related articles  Save this to del.icio.us 
Users' Comments  RSS feed comment  |  Average user rating     (0 vote)

Name
E-mail
Title  
Comment
 
Available characters: 600
 
  Mathguard security question:
546         9T5      
W E    3      B   NPL
NKY   BJT   WYK      
Q M    9      L   Y3I
E4C         QGN      
   
   

No comment posted

Login

Newsletters
Name:
Email:
feed image
Top
About Us  |  Disclaimer  |  Feedback  |  SiteMap  |  Contact Us  |  Invite Your Friends  |  © 2008 www.aarogya.com. All Rights Reserved. | T-Edge Solutions Pvt. Ltd.
This site is best viewed on IE 7.0/ Netscape 7.0/ Mozilla 2.0 or higher versions of these browsers on a screen resolution of 1024 × 768 pixels and above.