|
U.S. government guidelines recommend an aggressive approach for treating high cholesterol and preventing heart disease in millions of women and men. The new guidelines were revised in 2001 from 1993 treatment guidelines by a national panel of 27 members and consultants representing public health organizations, medical groups, nursing associations, consumer groups, and federal agencies. The panel made significant updates to the previous cholesterol guidelines, calling for an estimated an increase in the number of people that need to take cholesterol-lowering drugs from 13 million Americans to an estimated 36 million. Guidelines for treating high cholesterol:
*based on fasting plasma triglyceride levels. Source: American Heart Association.
"The guidelines will help doctors determine heart attack risk more precisely than was possible before," said Dr. Scott Grundy, ATP III chairperson and director of the Center for Human Nutrition at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, in an NHLBI news release at the time the guidelines were issued. "That allows treatment to be more individualized. We now know that cholesterol-lowering treatment is more effective when its intensity closely matches the level of risk." Examples of statins used to lower cholesterol:
Heart disease is the leading cause of death among both men and women in the United States and in Europe. Approximately 12.8 million Americans suffer from coronary artery disease and nearly 500,000 Americans die from heart attacks caused by coronary artery disease each year. Over 12 million Americans have a history of heart attack, chest pain (angina), or both. Dr. Lenfant, Director of the NHLBI, said that if the new cholesterol guidelines are followed, heart disease would no longer be the number one cause of death. Additional Resources and References
Updated: March 16, 2008 |
||||||||||
Imaginis.com suscribes to the HONcode principles of the Health on the Net Foundation.
Copyright 1997-2009 Imaginis Corporation. All rights reserved. Imaginis® is a registered service mark of Imaginis Corporation, a health services company. All other trademarks and copyrights are property of their respective owners. Note: Use of this online service is subject to the disclaimer and the terms and conditions contained herein. Information found within the Imaginis.com website or in other sites linked to from Imaginis.com is provided for educational purposes only and is not intended to be used as a substitute for diagnosis and treatment by a medical doctor. Imaginis does not endorse and has no responsibility for the content of any other sites listed on Imaginis.com, and provides links and references merely as a convenience to its users. Seek immediate medical attention if your condition is urgent. Imaginis - The Breast Cancer Resource