Extremely high calcium score at 42 - is there any positive here??
I'm a 42-year-old male. Exercise regularly, not overweight, non-smoker. While not overweight, I will say that my diet is crap -- way too much fast food, pizza etc. I guess I still eat like a high schooler.
Anyway, I saw a cardiologist figuring after age 40 this would be wise. He took bloodwork which was basically all fine. The cholesterol was *slightly* elevated and he recommended getting a heart calcium score. Told me he expected it would show nothing but that he just wanted to be thorough. Turns out the score came back at 397.
Obviously, this caught me totally flat-footed. I figured with my diet there might be some plaque, but this number places me in the 99.999th percentile for my age. And everything I have read online sound pretty dire about my long-term prognosis now -- that significant damage has been done, that it can't be reversed and can only get worse and that the statistical linkage between a number like this and heart attack-stroke is profound.
Weirdly, the cardiologist did not seem to be conveying any alarm when he told me the score, though. He was extremely matter of fact about it. Just said it was "very, very high" and that he would put me on a statin (which I've already started) and that I should take daily baby aspirin (doing that too). He said I should focus on improving diet and continue exercising (I already run 4-5x a week) but he was also pretty emphatic that "this must be genetic." (There is a history of heart problems on my father's side of the family -- though he is 76 and has yet to have any heart trouble himself.)
This was all a lot to get hit with at once. From the doctor's casual, matter of fact tone, I left the office a little confused, wondering if maybe this score wasn't that big of a deal and was a very manageable thing. Why else would the doctor not seem that disturbed by it? But then I started reading everything I could find on the subject and it's been pretty devastating.
Obviously, I'm ready, willing and able to implement the dietary changes, but for the score to be this bad at this young of an age (and with no smoking history, not being overweight, and doing regular exercise), it seems like I'm in serious trouble here. So upsetting to read that I can't bring this number down.
I guess I'm just posting this in the hopes that others here might have some experience and insight and be able to offer something, anything that is encouraging? When I read all of the medical material online about high CAC scores, am I missing something? This has all been playing out over the last 24 hours and I feel like I've basically just found out that I could drop dead of a heart attack at any moment and that my life expectancy has been drastically reduced with this news -- and that there's no way to get it back to normal. I now have a million questions for the cardiologist, but when I called his office today I was told he's just started his vacation and won't be back until August.
Any encouragement or practical advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Heart & Blood Health Support Group.
So I hear what you’re saying, but my concern is that even diabetes that is being treated is an added risk factor for heart events. So while a diabetic with heart disease would certainty be well advised to be on statins, I’m wondering if the calculus is any different if the statin is what causes the diabetes. I’m going to talk to the cardio about whether there are other statins that may not do the same blood sugar damage to me, or maybe if cutting the dose (every other day?) or combing with metformin or something else would make sense. Every cardio I’ve seen until now has stressed that my lack of diabetes improves my outlook. So if taking this statin is causing me to become diabetic, I don’t want to just let it happen.
I think you also asked before about Budoff’s recommendations and fish oil. He told me it seems to only have an effect in those with high triglycerides and that it was fine if I wanted to take it, but that triglycerides aren’t an issue for me. He pointed to multiple studies on aged garlic extract slowing and stabilizing plaque progression though and recommended 1,200 mg/day (and specifically suggested the Kyolic brand).
While I characterize icosapent ethyl (Vascepa) as super oil, it really is more than that - did you ask specifically about Vascepa?
Will you posting the actual results of you various tests, including stress with echo, and transthoracic cardio gram?
Yes, that aspect of the conversation was specifically about icosapent ethyl. And see my last post before that one for the text of my echo report. Happy to share any results that I have that might be useful - that is what I have for an echo.
So transthoracic echocardiogram numbers seem to be really good.
How's the stress test metrics? You should have had both the stress test data and the echo data performed just prior to and after - different from the transthoracic. There would be some assessments re how heart performed under the stress, as well as ECG data, heart rate, etc.
This is the report from the stress test:
Exercise Stress Test
The patient performed treadmill exercise under the Bruce Protocol, completing 12 minutes 35 seconds and achieved an estimated workload of 13 metabolic equivalents (METS).
Baseline HR : 69 bpm
Peak HR: 160 bpm (90 % of max PHR)
85% of Max Predicted HR: 151
Baseline BP: 110/70 mmHg
Peak BP: 140/80 mmHg
Calculated DWP: 22400
Exercise terminated due to: Achievement of target HR
Symptoms: None
HR response: Calculated patient's HR reserve indicates a normal chronotropic response (normal is greater than 80%).
Baseline HR/BP: Normal
Heart rate response to exercise was appropriate.
The blood pressure response was appropriate.
Performance: Excellent exercise capacity for age and gender. Excellent level of exercise.
So, steveny, a great stress test with echo ... great numbers, right? You and your heart are in great shape, the CTA supports the stress with echo, right?
CAC is the outlier, right?
steveny,
I'm going to the "is there any positive here" ... I think, and the data shows, yes.
Shift gears and stay positive - let's talk about it!
Ha, I really do appreciate that. I know what I can sound like here. And I’ll take it. But I’m also a worrier by nature, which has made the aspects of this that are out of my control extra difficult to deal with. Mainly it’s:
- Knowing that I have a high plaque load, that spontaneous plaque rupture can happen at any time and that the stats say high CAC is the single strongest predictive variable for future event.
- Not knowing how I acquired so much plaque so early in life. As I’ve said, there’s no obvious family history or blood level that points to this. Every cardiologist who has looked at my profile has been very surprised to see that I have any plaque, let alone this much. So I fear that something is driving this in me that is not well-recognized or understood; that the current best practices for care — which I am following — won’t be effective in the face of it; and that the atherosclerotic process will continue unabated. Something to do with thyroid resistance, insulin resistance, a broader resistance to hormones — I dunno. But I do think that’s where I’ve had some I’ll-defined but serious issues metabolically for the last decade that have baffled some top doctors and endocrinologists. So I suspect there’s a link here but that any meaningful diagnosis (and a treatment based on it) will remain elusive.
@steveny
I've read your story and it's really uplifting- I am a 41 year old female "almost" 42 and I went to the ED with Chest pain- it was noted on my CT that i had a small focal calcification in my LAD- needless to say I have done ALL you have done as far as researching. It will def. make you think about your prospective on life at our age!! I have done the stress/echo and all the labs- which all came back fantabulous! I was put on Crestor 10mg- and a beta blocker- I was the one that pushed statins b/c of my research..anything to try and stabilize the "Hot Plaque" is my concern. My cardiologist will not send me to have a CAC- he says he knows by looking at the CT my CAC is low...however...I pushed for a CTA- I am scheduled for that in June. I to hope I have Clean arteries and my deposits are on the outside. He did tell me though if it comes back with a blockage which he says he is 98% positive i won't have one- but heck by looking at statistics I'm already in that 1/2% for calcium in my age group who knows- I PRAY I am in the 98% for no blockage....It's all so scary. I have a Duke Cardiologist and he seems to really know his stuff....
Anyways I am rambling- I just wanted to say I am glad I have at least one person close to my age I can relate to...as far as age goes and the unwanted Calcium- I thank God for a new day everyday!!! I hope you are still doing well.
I am 78 YO female. Because my cholesterol was in the high normal range, in 2007 my cardio sent me for a CAC just to assure there was no calcified plaque. We were both shocked when it came back in the mid 500 range. I immediately went on a statin and removed all eggs, red meat, butter from my diet. I wasn't able to tolerate statins so was without them for several years until Pralulent was approved for reducing cholesterol and heart attacks. Fast forward maybe 5 years and I developed left arm pain with minimal exercise. Into the hospital and received two stents. I am back at the gym, doing vigorous exercise. I must continue to watch my diet and use the Pralulent but I'm doing fine. My father died of his one and only heart attack at age 50 (in 1962 before all these advanced cardio testings were available) so I feel fortunate to have made it to this age. My Mom had by-pass surgery when she was 79 so I am glad I didn't have to go that route.
I am one of 7 children and two of us have calcium scores above zero. I guess we got the problematic cardio genes. And we can't beat ourselves up about this. Only 25% of cholesterol is from diet. The remainder is made by the liver. And cholesterol is different in different people. One sister has cholesterol of over 300 and a zero CAC score. I have an abundance of LPa (L P little a) which is a low density lipoprotein with a little tail on it which burrows into the artery wall. She has light and fluffy LDL which just floats through her blood stream. It is indeed genetic.
Steveny, I understand that you are feeling heartsick and betrayed by your body. If you hadn't already been taking such good care of your body I think you would be in a far worse situation. I suggest you see a nutritionist to discuss healthy eating choices and then just know you are doing everything you can to keep your heart healthy.
Do you know where your calcified plaque is located? Some arteries are of less concern than others.
I wish you peace and good health.
Donna