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If someone with heart disease is already lowering their bad cholesterol below 70 with a medium-strength statin, taking stronger cholesterol meds probably won’t significantly reduce their risk of...
If people with heart disease already have low 'bad' cholesterol from statins, going even lower might help avoid heart attacks, strokes, or surgeries like stents.
PCSK9 inhibitors can help lower bad cholesterol, either when added to other treatments or used instead of them.
These cholesterol drugs work well for lots of different people, even if they're already taking other meds for high cholesterol.
These cholesterol drugs, called PCSK9 inhibitors, probably help lower bad cholesterol in many types of patients — more than fake pills or other cholesterol medicines.
People with a rare cholesterol condition stayed on a pricey cholesterol drug for about a year on average, even though it didn’t help much — doctors might just keep prescribing it because they’re...
People with a rare genetic cholesterol disorder who still have a little bit of working cholesterol-cleaning system in their body tend to respond better to a certain type of cholesterol drug, lowering...
People with a rare genetic form of high cholesterol caused by two broken copies of the LDLR gene don’t get much benefit from PCSK9 inhibitor drugs — most see almost no drop in their bad cholesterol.
Even when people with a rare genetic cholesterol disorder take powerful new drugs called PCSK9 inhibitors along with their usual treatments, none of them got their bad cholesterol down to the...
For people with a rare cholesterol condition called HoFH who are already on cholesterol meds, adding a newer drug (PCSK9 inhibitor) barely lowers bad cholesterol for most — and 7 out of 10 don’t get...
If someone with type 2 diabetes has stable 'bad' cholesterol but their triglycerides go up over a year, they’re more likely to develop dangerous plaque buildup in their heart arteries—even if...
If you have type 2 diabetes but feel fine and your 'bad' cholesterol is under control, having higher triglycerides might still be quietly making your heart artery plaques more dangerous over time.
If you have type 2 diabetes but no symptoms and your 'bad' cholesterol is under control, what happens to your heart artery plaque over a year might depend on your triglycerides: going up could mean...
Even if someone with type 2 diabetes has good cholesterol levels, high triglycerides might still mean their heart plaque is getting worse in dangerous ways.
In healthy adults, leftover cholesterol in the blood doesn’t seem to add extra heart disease risk once you already know someone’s LDL (‘bad’) cholesterol level.
If healthy adults have higher 'bad' cholesterol levels, they’re more likely to show early signs of artery hardening, like thicker artery walls or plaque buildup in the neck arteries.
Even if you're a middle-aged adult with no obvious heart risks, having slightly high blood sugar — not quite diabetes — might mean you're more likely to have early signs of heart disease building up...
Guys and older people in middle age are more likely to have hidden artery buildup—even if they seem healthy—just like we usually see with heart disease.
Even if you're healthy and don't have typical heart disease risks, having higher 'bad' cholesterol (LDL) might still mean you're more likely to have early signs of artery buildup — and the higher the...
Even if you're middle-aged and seem healthy with normal cholesterol and no heart disease risks, almost half of people like you might already have early signs of heart disease you can't feel.
We can now lower bad cholesterol to super low levels with treatment — even lower than what babies or some animals have — but we're not sure if that's totally safe over the long term.
Taking statins might raise your chances of getting type 2 diabetes, and it's the medicine itself — not lower cholesterol — that's likely to blame.
Low LDL cholesterol probably isn't causing illnesses like cancer or depression — it's more likely that these diseases are lowering cholesterol as a side effect.
Even if medicine lowers your 'bad' cholesterol to super low levels—like what you see in babies or animals—your body can still make the hormones and digestive juices it needs.