High Lipoprotein (a)
I've had a history of borderline cholesterol. Age about 50 and generally active life style with activities like brisk walking, Tennis (2-3 times week). Weekly steps are in the range of 50-65K. But because my father died of cardiac arrest at the age of 62 and history of borderline cholesterol, doctor and a specialist (not cardiologist) prescribed me Statins (5mg only). I was hesitant because of side effects but professionals instilled fear in me (rightly so probably) that I started the medication 3 months ago and my overall cholesterol, LDLs and triglycerides came down significantly. Doctor suggested to check my Lipoprotein (a), although I got it checked after taking statin for 2 months, it came quite high, almost 3 times of max reference limit. I am concerned with that. Couple of questions, if someone had similar case:
1. Is it possible that statin increased my Lipo (a) numbers?
2. I've been told that this is genetic and I can't anything about it and this means I am at a higher risk than someone within range, what should be my next steps? Is to get calcium score and then finally angiogram to see how much blocking I have at the moment? Its taking emotional toll on me that I may be sitting on a time bomb.
Thanks for help.
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wow, that’s amazing. You made it through. That’s great. God was watching over you ! if you don’t mind me asking, how old are you?
🙂 I'm 55
My suggestion for anyone who has high LP (a) and asymptomatic, to go through Heart CT Angio, which is non-intrusive test and does 2 things:
- Tells calcium deposit score (ideally 0)
- Looks deposits in heart arteries and pics of vales
Gives you a sense whats going on inside. Fortunately, mine came as 22 (not ideal but not bad) and condition of arteries looks ok with CT with some minor plaques. Me and my cardiologist now focus on prevention vs any kind of treatment.