I have a very high calcium score. What next?
Just joined the site and I'm looking to share with others who have had a high calcium score. I found out today that mine is 2996 and I am scared by this. I am 61 and I am totally asymptomatic. Now I feel like a walking time bomb. I am thinking of requesting an angiogram to see if there's any narrowing anywhere and if it can be corrected with a stent. After a second heart doctor told me that the plaque buildup might be uniform over the course of years with no big problem areas, I am encouraged. But the score still freaks me out, specifically my LAD at 1333. I don't smoke or drink but I have to lose 40 lbs.
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High calcium in the arteries in not the all due to the 'aging process'. Yes as people get older 'some' and probably will get some degree of calcium in their arteries. I know people in their late 60s with scores of 0, and teenagers with scores over 100. Genetic disposition, lifestyle factors, diet, vascular injury, inflammation, and repair all play a huge role beyond aging. It is present in 90% of men and 67% of women older than the age of 70, thus it leave the rest of those older folks with none.
Well said, christianzane.
This just out - potential partial alternative to statins ... https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2215024?query=featured_home
Thank you for the run down @christianzane,
It's nice to know there are many other individuals going through this also...not that I wish this on anyone. Your story is basically identical to me, I started also shopping the outer fringes of the supermarket and my wife and I are closer to the Mediterranean diet. I am not an alcoholic but enjoy the occasional glass of wine or a glass of bourbon. My brother's cardiologist is very proactive according to my brother, but he reminds him also to LIVE. That is not a statement to be careless and eat buffalo wings, chips and bacon every day, but his "OK" to periodically cheat and enjoy something that may not be too good for you is ok.
I exercise 6 days a week now---about 2-2.5 miles with an incline and at an alternating pace to make me break a sweat. Again, no symptoms just a CAC score that was in the in the 100+ range that made me realize I may not actually be invincible. My father did have a heart attack---but thankfully survived and followed a better diet, exercise 3 days a week...he lived for another 25 years into his eighties. So... life will go on and I keep telling myself that. Out of curiosity did you ever go see a Cardiologist?
BTW....Ironically, I worked as a Chief Administrative Officer for Cancer Services for a large Academic Healthsystem for a decade---I know more about cancer than I did with Heart issues.
I don't see a cardiologist. I don't smoke or have high blood pressure, diabetes or issues with being out of breath, heart palpitations, inflammation, swelling etc. EKG and stress test all normal. I'm a healthy person with a high CAC score so only thing for me to do is make changes which include 10mg of rosuvastatin, a mostly plant based diet free of trans fats, regular exercise and a good nights sleep. And that occasional glass of Cabernet. Not sure what a cardiologist would do. My cholesterol levels now are crazy low but the second I start experiencing chest pain when exerting myself then I'll definitely see one.
Icosapent ethyl?
Hi Ethan
My husband has an LDL of 68, total cholesterol of 168, and a Calcium Score of 3899. The doctor has suggested a stress test next. He also has MGUS That has not progressed. Is this Calcium score the MGUS progressing? Is it hart disease? He feels like a time bomb. He is overweight, drinks alcohol and doesn’t exercise. Please advise.
Thanks.
He needs to start exercising, quit drinking, start eating healthy. He needs to lose weight also.
This is his "Wake up Call" ! Listen to your doctor and not the bottle!
You are going to have to quietly change some of his life styled without him realizing it. DON'T nag. Just quietly do it. Check out the website of Dr. Gundry. He used to repair hearts. He got tired of doing that and started researching why some people live longer than others. The Mayo Clinic has great ideas and recipes to try.
Since both encourage a more plant based diet, you might just tell him, you are trying to save money. Or you are bored eating the same things all the time.
You may not be able to do much about his drinking. But you can start to become an adventurous cook. AND start checking out his insurance policies and other financials. If he gets curious, tell him you want to know if you can fix the kitchen or go on trips by yourself! That might scare him.
Get a dog! It will need walking. And it will be a great comfort to you if he passes. Trust me.
I know some of this is "tongue in cheek" but there are some serious suggestions here to help.
All the best.
LDL and TC numbers are pretty good - CAC not so good, but not reversible so need to work to slow down.
Age?
Advanced lipids panel? (named Cardio IQ by one provider)
Had stress test?
Had echo with the stress test?
Ultrasound of extremities?
Taking statin?
Icosapent Ethyl?