58 year old healthy, active female with high coronary artery calcium
I am a 58 year old female who lives an active, healthy (or so I thought) lifestyle. I exercise 6 days a week which includes cardio dance, weights, and walking. I have borderline high cholesterol (LDL 102, HDL 83), low triglycerides, BP 110/66, A1C 5.9. My primary doctor recommended a calcium scan which came back at 107, putting me in the 92nd percentile for my age, with most of the calcium in the LAD. I was shocked! I’ve never had symptoms, but my dad had a heart attack in his 60’s.
I am now on 10 mg rosuvastatin, a very low fat, low carb diet, and am exercising less than before. The cardiologist I saw said that I may have been exercising too much which was causing inflammation that could have led to the calcium in my arteries. My EKG was normal, I had a carotid artery ultrasound which came back minimal 1-15%, and I am awaiting a stress test in February 11.
Any advice or words of wisdom or encouragement? I’ve been very worried since learning about this back in November.
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Thanks for posting this study!
Discouraging to hear about the sleep apnea. I hope your diagnosis was timely enough to not impact your fibrillation too severely.
Point taken about the CAC score and thanks for making it. It's easy to get unrealistically negative about the situation.
I think/hope I've hit the point you've describe. I ask lots of questions. In fact, I think I asked enough questions at the cardiologist visit a few days ago for him to offer a 6-month follow-up rather than the standard one year. I'm not sure why he offered, but I took it!
I wish I could describe the left arm pain with precise details. The best I can tell you is what it is NOT. It is not like a sore muscle. It is not like a muscle spasm. It is different and there was no question in my mind as to what was happening. The arm pain issue had been more like a tingle, months earlier, only when I was walking up a steep hill and I thought it was the angle of my neck as I have a bulging cervical disk. But the night before I went to the ER, when walking up stairs I developed arm pain that took about a half hour to subside while lying in bed. The next morning I was doing some very normal things and found the left arm pain was back and strong. I called my cardio and the triage nurse told me to get to the ER. In retrospect, I should have gone the night before.
I did not experience any chest pain or sweating.
So my advice to anyone who experiences an unfamiliar left arm pain is to simply go to the ER immediately and let them tell you it isn't your heart.
My cardio says if you are having chest pain and think it is gastro related, take two tums and if the pain is still there 10 minutes later, call 911. Again, better to let the experts tell us it isn't heart related.
I wish you good luck and good health.
Thanks for a very helpful description!
Great food for thought! I’m definitely toeing the line between educated/concerned/annoying!
Great advice! Always better to be safe than sorry!
Here's the link: https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/full/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.122.061173
Thank you for posting this study.