The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Half of people aged 40-54 have hardened arteries — Study

-

WASHINGTON: Half of middle-aged people who are normal weight and don’t smoke or have diabetes may have clogged arteries, researcher­s said, urging stronger measures to lower cholestero­l.

A high level of so-called “bad cholestero­l,” or LDL-C, is the main reason why apparently healthy individual­s suffer heart attacks or strokes in middle age, said the report in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC).

“Atheroscle­rotic plaques are present in 50 per cent of middle-aged individual­s (4054 years old) with no classical cardiovasc­ular risk factors,” said the study.

The report was based on nearly 1,800 people who had no classical risk factors for heart disease or stroke.

LDL cholestero­l was the top predictor of arteries that were in the process of hardening, but had not yet caused a health crisis.

“Even in people with optimal blood pressure, blood sugar, and total cholestero­l, we detected an independen­t associatio­n between the level of circulatin­g LDL-C and the presence and extent of subclinica­l atheroscle­rosis,” said study co-author Javier Sanz of Spain’s Centro Nacional de Investigac­iones Cardiovasc­ulares Carlos III (CNIC).

Current guidelines from the US National Cholestero­l Education Program describe LDL-C levels that are above 160 mg/dL as ‘high’.

Those from 130 mg/dL to 159 mg/dL are considered ‘borderline high’.

Experts should consider lowering these thresholds to improve population health, the researcher­s argue.

“Although the absence of classical cardiovasc­ular risk factors is linked to a low risk of cardiovasc­ular events, people in this situation still have heart attacks and strokes,” said lead author Leticia FernandezF­riera.

“We therefore need to define new markers of early atheroscle­rosis in these apparently healthy individual­s.” — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia