Should You Be Worried About Your Cholesterol Levels?

Jun 23
06:38

2008

Mario Carini

Mario Carini

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Maintaining your cholesterol will not prevent you from suffering from a future heart attack. There are some better indicators that you are ripe for a heart attack. But your doctor is not checking for them. Here's what you should know about what needs to be checked before your first stroke and heart attack.

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The message to maintain your cholesterol levels have been hammered into us. Millions use statin drugs unaware that despite drug use they are still candidates for future heart attacks and strokes.

Some 40 million Americans take statins. Yet this has not reduced the number of people who continue to die from heart attacks and stroke every year even though many have normal cholesterol levels at the time of death. Clearly there is a lot more than just trying to normalize your cholesterol levels. Of course cholesterol is a major focus simply because it is profitable for the manufacturers who produce the drugs.

Whether you believe it or not,Should You Be Worried About Your Cholesterol Levels? Articles a high cholesterol level is not very reliable in predicting a forthcoming heart attack. Despite the billions of dollars spent, statins are largely ineffective and offer serious side effects that rule out any benefits they may offer. Statins do lower cholesterol, but at a price. They benefit a limited number of people, principally those who have high levels of cholesterol.

Statins suppress the activity of an enzyme in the liver that is involved in the production of cholesterol. Even if you manage to lower your cholesterol levels significantly, your liver would only create more of it! Statins are notorious inn robbing your heart of CoQ10, a major factor that aids the heart in its beating function and in the metabolic process that energizes the cells. If you don't supplement with CoQ10 you will likely suffer from muscle pain, fatigue and ultimately heart failure!

Constant use of statins have led to memory loss, suicidal behavior, mood swings and neurological disorders. The brain needs cholesterol in order to function. Liver, digestive problems, congestive heart failure and complete muscle breakdown are yet other symptoms of statin overuse. Some studies have indicated that statins are even linked to cancer.

Inflammation is the primary cause of heart disease. Your homocysteine levels and high C-reactive proteins are better markers that predict a future heart attack. Methionine, an amino acid found in all animal and vegetable protein breaks down into homocysteine through the digestive process. Without the presence of helper nutrients homocysteine levels rise to dangerous levels. It promotes the growth of smooth muscle cells just below the inner wall of arteries that creates a bulge in the artery. It's this bulge on which cholesterol, calcium and many other products can stick to. The buildup eventually leads to a clogged artery. It's these blood traps that ultimately lead to impotence, poor memory, heart attacks and death. The aretery walls in baboons have been destroyed due to high homocysteine levels.

Supplementation with B-6, B-12 and folic acid helps in reducing your homocysteine levels.

If you are fixated on lowering your cholesterol then you should take fish oil supplements and CoQ10. Fish oil improves blood flow, discourages clotting and normalizes heart rhythms. Magnesium, another nutrient, relaxes the artery walls and lowers blood pressure and helps to prevent arrhythmias. Taking vitamins C and E help fight free radical damage.

So why don't you get tested for homocysteine?

To put it bluntly there simply is no drug yet to treat high homocysteine levels. Rest assured that as soon as a drug is marketed, you'll hear the great need for testing from the medical establishment and the media about having both your cholesterol and homocysteine checked.