mugwump67 Wrote:
Yeah, I take simvistatin--reluctantly. Apparently my cholesterol is 'borderline', which according to my doctor, means that I have to treat it if I'm going to be considered a compliant patient and not be forced to shop for a new doctor. 10 years ago, my cholestoral would have been considered good.
No noticable side effects, but I'm on a load of other crap that could mask them. I miss being able to eat grapefuit--its one of the few fruits that I really like.
I'd like to be off of them. No one in my family has ever died of heart disease, and we've never been big on low-fat diets. 'Borderline' to me implies a judgement call, but apparently doctors have decided that 'borderline' is the new 'severe'.
Yes, there's a statistically optimal level for all this stuff, but there needs to be some wiggle room for chrissake.
There's an easy explanation for this: serum LDL cholesterol levels are on a continuum. Which in theoretical terms means you can a numerical value anywhere between 0 and infinity. How one interprets that numerical value is up for debate/investigation.
For healthy individuals, above a certain cutoff (160-180mg/dL) there are clearly adverse long-term cardiovascular effects associated with an elevated LDL cholesterol. Further analysis may indicate increased adverse effects at a level as low as 140 mg/dL...and furthermore, other studies may point to even lower levels.
Simply stated, there is no safe cutoff/standardized value. The numerical values change often depending on your co-morbid conditions, medications, family history, the most recent evidence, etc. For example, in a healthy individual, 160-180 mg/dL is an accepted cutoff for LDL. In someone with heart disease or several conditions equitable to heart disease, some physicians may treat until a level less than 70 mg/dL is reached, while some may only treat to < 100 mg/dL. So as you can see there is no universal application to these numerical values. The cutoff to treat cholesterol is often an arbitrary decision; and your entire "condition" is factored into when or when not to treat.
There is a definite gray zone which you refer to as "wiggle room"; and you, as a patient, have every right to refuse medications. If you have questions regarding his/her rationale, simply ask instead of jumping to conclusions.
Hope that helps.