Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Risk calculator is a helpful, general tool

- Write to Dr. Roach at ToYourGood­Health@ med.cornell.edu or mail to 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803.

Dear Dr. Roach: My friends and I are athletic seniors with no health conditions. We take no medication­s and eat a plant-based diet. When we put our similar test scores in the CVD risk calculator, we made an interestin­g discovery.

Our numbers consistent­ly fell above the 7.5% 10-year risk until we entered in a younger age. For example, my risk at age 72 was 10.8%, but at age 68, it was 6.7%. Do we need meds because we’re old? — T.K.

Age is an important risk factor for coronary heart disease. In many large population studies, about half of men and a third of women developed coronary disease by the time they died. While a healthy lifestyle and management of risk factors can dramatical­ly reduce the risk of heart disease compared with those in a standard population, there is no proven way to reduce the risk to zero.

Having a risk does not mean that you need to take medicines. Had you entered in what would happen if you were to take a statin, the calculator would have shown a reduction in your absolute risk by roughly 1.5%.

However, you and your group do not seem like you would be general candidates for the studies.

A calculator is a helpful place to start, but an experience­d doctor is needed to interpret the informatio­n and identify the weaknesses of using a calculator like this for people it has not been developed for.

While individual­s in the pharmaceut­ical industry have made some catastroph­ic errors of judgment, medicines, including statins, have prolonged the lives of hundreds of thousands of people. It is certainly true that adopting a plantbased diet and exercising regularly would have even larger benefits than statins, and at a lower cost. I try every day to motivate people to do so, and to adopt other healthy behaviors.

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