Title: Hyperlipidemia
1Hyperlipidemia
Saudi Diploma in Family Medicine Center of Post
Graduate Studies in Family Medicine
Presented by Dr. Zekeriya Aktürk zekeriya.akturk_at_
gmail.com www.aile.net
2Top 10 cause of Death in K.S.A.
3Top 10 cause of Death in K.S.A.
30
4- Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are the main cause
of morbidity and mortality among the Saudi
population1 - A significant proportion of hospital admissions
is due to CVD, whether acute or chronic or to
cardiac procedures including angiograms2
1-Al Balla SR,. J Trop Med Hyg 199396157-62
2-Bamgboye EA, Saudi Med J 199313(1)8-13. .
5Prevalence of dyslipidemia in Saudi Adults
- The overall prevalence of hypercholesterolemia
- TC gt 200 mg/ dL 35.4 .
-
- The overall prevalence of hypertriglyceridemia
- TG gt 150 mg/ dL) 49.6.
- HDL Values in men and women
- Men lt40mg/dL 74.8
- Women lt50mg/dL 81.8
Al-Nozha MM.et al. Metabolic syndrome in Saudi
Arabia. Saudi Med J 2005 26 (12) 1918-1925
6Hyperlipidemia
- Michele Ritter, M.D.
- Argy Resident February, 2007
7The story of lipids
- Chylomicrons transport fats from the intestinal
mucosa to the liver - In the liver, the chylomicrons release
triglycerides and some cholesterol and become
low-density lipoproteins (LDL). - LDL then carries fat and cholesterol to the
bodys cells. - High-density lipoproteins (HDL) carry fat and
cholesterol back to the liver for excretion.
8The story of lipids (cont.)
- When oxidized LDL cholesterol gets high, atheroma
formation in the walls of arteries occurs, which
causes atherosclerosis. - HDL cholesterol is able to go and remove
cholesterol from the atheroma. - Atherogenic cholesterol ? LDL, VLDL, IDL
9Atherosclerosis
10Causes of Hyperlipidemia
- Diet
- Hypothyroidism
- Nephrotic syndrome
- Anorexia nervosa
- Obstructive liver disease
- Obesity
- Diabetes mellitus
- Pregnancy
- Obstructive liver disease
- Acute heaptitis
- Systemic lupus erythematousus
- AIDS (protease inhibitors)
11Dietary sources of Cholesterol
Type of Fat Main Source Effect on Cholesterol levels
Monounsaturated Olives, olive oil, canola oil, peanut oil, cashews, almonds, peanuts and most other nuts avocados Lowers LDL, Raises HDL
Polyunsaturated Corn, soybean, safflower and cottonseed oil fish Lowers LDL, Raises HDL
Saturated Whole milk, butter, cheese, and ice cream red meat chocolate coconuts, coconut milk, coconut oil , egg yolks, chicken skin Raises both LDL and HDL
Trans Most margarines vegetable shortening partially hydrogenated vegetable oil deep-fried chips many fast foods most commercial baked goods Raises LDL
12Hereditary Causes of Hyperlipidemia
- Familial Hypercholesterolemia
- Codominant genetic disorder, coccurs in
heterozygous form - Occurs in 1 in 500 individuals
- Mutation in LDL receptor, resulting in elevated
levels of LDL at birth and throughout life - High risk for atherosclerosis, tendon xanthomas
(75 of patients), tuberous xanthomas and
xanthelasmas of eyes. - Familial Combined Hyperlipidemia
- Autosomal dominant
- Increased secretions of VLDLs
- Dysbetalipoproteinemia
- Affects 1 in 10,000
- Results in apo E2, a binding-defective form of
apoE (which usually plays important role in
catabolism of chylomicron and VLDL) - Increased risk for atherosclerosis, peripheral
vascular disease - Tuberous xanthomas, striae palmaris
13Checking lipids
- Nonfasting lipid panel
- measures HDL and total cholesterol
- Fasting lipid panel
- Measures HDL, total cholesterol and triglycerides
- LDL cholesterol is calculated
- LDL cholesterol total cholesterol (HDL
triglycerides/5)
14When to check lipid panel
- Two different Recommendations
- Adult Treatment Panel (ATP III) of the National
Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) - Beginning at age 20 obtain a fasting (9 to 12
hour) serum lipid profile consisting of total
cholesterol, LDL, HDL and triglycerides - Repeat testing every 5 years for acceptable
values - United States Preventative Services Task Force
- Women aged 45 years and older, and men ages 35
years and older undergo screening with a total
and HDL cholesterol every 5 years. - If total cholesterol gt 200 or HDL lt40, then a
fasting panel should be obtained - Cholesterol screening should begin at 20 years in
patients with a history of multiple
cardiovascular risk factors, diabetes, or family
history of either elevated cholesteral levels or
premature cardiovascular disease.
15Goals for Lipids
- LDL
- lt 100 ?Optimal
- 100-129 ? Near optimal
- 130-159 ? Borderline
- 160-189? High
- 190 ? Very High
- Total Cholesterol
- lt 200 ? Desirable
- 200-239 ? Borderline
- 240 ? High
- HDL
- lt 40 ? Low
- 60 ? High
- Serum Triglycerides
- lt 150 ? normal
- 150-199 ? Borderline
- 200-499 ? High
- 500 ? Very High
16Determining Cholesterol Goal(LDL!)
- Look at JNC 7 Risk Factors
- Cigarette smoking
- Hypertension (BP 140/90 or on anti-hypertensives)
- Low HDL cholesterol (lt 40 mg/dL)
- Family History of premature coronary heart
disease (CHD) (CHD in first-degree male relative
lt55 or CHD in first-degree female relative lt 65) - Age (men 45, women 55)
17Determining Goal LDL
- CHD and CHD Risk Equivalents
- Peripheral Vascular Disease
- Cerebral Vascular Accident
- Diabetes Mellitus
18LDL Goals
- 0-1 Risk Factors
- LDL goal is 160
- If LDL 160 Initiate TLC (therapeutic
lifestyle changes) - If LDL 190 Initiate pharmaceutical treatment
- 2 Risk Factors
- LDL goal is 130
- If LDL 130 Initiate TLC
- If LDL 160 Initiate pharmaceutical treatment
- CHD or CHD Risk Equivalent
- LDL goal is 100 (or 70)
- If LDL 100 Initiate TLC and pharmaceutical
treatment
19Treatment of Hyperlipidemia
- Lifestyle modification
- Low-cholesterol diet
- Exercise
20Medications for Hyperlipidemia
Drug Class Agents Effects ( change) Side Effects
HMG CoA reductase inhibitors Lovastatin Pravastatin ?LDL (18-55),? HDL (5-15) ? Triglycerides (7-30) Myopathy, increased liver enzymes
Cholesterol absorption inhibitor Ezetimibe ? LDL( 14-18), ? HDL (1-3) ?Triglyceride (2) Headache, GI distress
Nicotinic Acid ?LDL (15-30), ? HDL (15-35) ? Triglyceride (20-50) Flushing, Hyperglycemia, Hyperuricemia, GI distress, hepatotoxicity
Fibric Acids Gemfibrozil Fenofibrate ?LDL (5-20), ?HDL (10-20) ?Triglyceride (20-50) Dyspepsia, gallstones, myopathy
Bile Acid sequestrants Cholestyramine ? LDL ? HDL No change in triglycerides GI distress, constipation, decreased absorption of other drugs
21(No Transcript)
22Case 1
- A 55-year-old woman without symptoms of CAD seeks
assessment and advice for routine health
maintenance. Her blood pressure is 135/85 mm Hg.
She does not smoke or have diabetes and has been
postmenopausal for 3 years. Her BMI is 24.
Lipoprotein analysis shows a total cholesterol
level of 240 mg/dL, an HDL level of 55 mg/dL, a
triglyceride level of 85 mg/dL and a LDL level is
180 mg/dL. The patient has no family history of
premature CAD.
23Case 1 (cont.)
- What is the goal LDL in this woman?
- What would you do if exercise/diet change do not
improve cholesterol after 3 months? - How would your management change if she
complained of claudication with walking?
24Case 2
- A 40- year-old man without significant past
medical history comes in for a routine annual
exam. He has no complaints but is worried
because his father had a heart attack at the
age of 45. He is a current smoker and has a
23-pack year history of tobacco use. A fasting
lipid panel reveals a LDL 170 mg/dL and an HDL of
35 mg/dL. Serum Triglycerides were 140 mg/dL.
Serum chemistries including liver panel are all
normal.
25Case 2 (cont.)
- What is this patients goal LDL?
- Would you start medication, and if so, what?
26Case 3
- A 65 year-old woman with medical history of Type
II diabetes, obesity, and hypertension comes to
your office for the first time. She has been
told her cholesterol was elevated in the past and
states that she has been following a low
cholesterol diet for the past 6 months after
seeing a dietician. She had a normal exercise
stress test last year prior to knee replacement
surgery and has never had symptoms of CHD. A
fasting lipid profile was performed and revealed
a LDL 130, HDL 30 and a total triglyceride of
300. Her Hgba1c is 6.5.
27Case 3 (cont.)
- What is this patients goal LDL?
- What medication would you consider starting in
this patient? - What labs would you want to monitor in this
patient?
28HYPERLIPIDEMIA
-
- Brian V. Reamy, MD, Colonel, USAF, MC
- Chair Department of Family Medicine
- Uniformed Services University
29Why Bother?
- Optimum treatment of lipids helps in the primary
secondary prevention of ASCVD still our
nations 1 killer
30Why Bother?
- ASCVD has been 1 cause of death every year since
1900 with exception of 1918. - 50 of CVD diagnoses and 15 of CVD deaths are in
patients lt 65 years of age - Many young adults have 2 or more risk factors
that go unrecognized and untreated. - HUGE opportunity to prevent disease!!
31NCEP/ATP III 15 May 2001
- www.nhlbi.nih.gov
- LDL goals lowered
- Raised acceptable HDL to 40
- Lowered TG goal to 150
- Risk Factor assessment enhanced with the 10-yr
Framingham risk calculator - Added the Metabolic Syndrome to Tx
32NCEP/ATP III 9 Steps
- Step 1 Obtain, complete fasting lipids.
- Interpret LDL lt 100mg/dl optimal
- LDL 100-129 near optimal
- LDL 130-159 borderline high
- LDL 160-189 high
- LDL gt190 very high
- (mg/dl x 0.0259mmol/l SI units)
33NCEP/ATP III
- Step 2 Identify if patient has CAD or equivalent
(PAD, DM, AAA, Carotid) - Step 3 Risk factor assessment (HTN, FHx, Tob,
Age Sex, HDLlt40 or gt60) - Step 4 If 2 or more risk factors do Framingham
10-yr risk assessment.
34Framingham Ten Year Risk
Men
Women
35Framingham Ten Year Risk
0
36Framingham Ten Year Risk
0
3
Non-Smoker
0
37Framingham Ten Year Risk
0
3
HDL 43
0
1
38Framingham Ten Year Risk
0
3
0
SBP 119, untreated
1
0 4
39Framingham Ten Year Risk
0
3
0
1
0 4
40NCEP/ATP III Step 5
Risk Category LDL Goal Start T.L.C. Start Drug Treatment
CHD/10yr riskgt20 (high) lt100mg/dl gt100mg/dl gt100 129mg/dl
2RF or 10yrlt20 (Medium) lt130mg/dl gt130mg/dl gt130 160mg/dl
0-1 risk factors (low) lt160mg/dl gt160mg/dl gt160 190mg/dl
41NCEP/ATP III Step 6
- Initiate Therapeutic Lifestyle Changes (TLC)
- AHA Step 2 diet
- Soluble fiber 10-25gm/day
- Plant sterols/Sitostanol (Benecol, Take Control
margarines) - lower LDL 10 - Increased exercise
- Weight management
42NCEP/ATP III Step 7
- Add drug therapy simultaneously to TLC in
patients with CHD or equivalent. Add drugs after
3 months if TLC not effective in other risk
categories. - Best unbiased source for review of drug
treatment The Medical Letter Choice of lipid
regulating drugs 432001,pp43-48 and
2003177-79.
43Drugs Step 7 (cont.)
- Resins- (cholestyramine,colestid, colesevelam)
lower LDL adjunct to statins GI side
effects/malabsorption issues - Niacin- miracle agent, cheap moves every
parameter in the right direction. But, side
effects problematic. NIASPAN easier to
tolerate. Need slow dose titration and pre-med
with ASA. Caution with Diabetes can worsen
glycemic control if HBA1C gt7.5 at baseline. Most
potent agent at increasing HDL.
44Drugs Step 7 (cont)
- Fibrates (fenofibrate, gemfibrozil) lower TG
and raise HDL. Can combine with statins but
caution re hepatic side effects. Cutting statin
dose by ½ is good rule. Fenofibrate qd less
side effects, gt - If combining w/ a statin use fenofibrate
gemfibrozil has gt rates of rhabdomyolysis
45Newer Drugs Step 7 (cont.)
- Ezetimibe (Zetia)- new class that inhibits the
intestinal absorption of cholesterol. Lowers LDL
17, TG 6, increases HDL by 1.3. Combined with
a statin increases effects of statin by 10-15
w/o side effects. VERY well tolerated at 10mg/d.
-
46Newer Drugs Step 7 (cont)
- Lovastatin Niacin (Advicor)- in fixed combos
20/500, 20/750, 20/1000. Increase dose monthly up
to max 40/2000. Max dose w/ LDL decrease 45, TG
42, and HDL increase by 41. Causes less
flushing and hepatic effects than any niacin
formulation. Greater risk of myopathy than a
statin alone.
47Newer Drugs Step 7
- Simvastatin(10/20/40/80) Ezetimibe 10mg
VYTORIN - OMACOR concentrated omega-3s 4 capsules 12
OTC fish oil capsules - Can interfere with clotting times caution in
folks on warfarin
48Drugs Step 7 (cont.)
- Statins- All w/ anti-inflammatory effects. None
safe in pregnancy. All are more potent by 10-15
with evening dosing. - - muscle pain 1-5
- - hepatitis (transaminasesgt3x nl.) 0.5
- - rhabdomyolysis rare incidence rates per
million Rxs pravastatin0.04, lovastatin0.19 - atorvastatin 0.04, simvastatin 0.12.
- (cerivistatin was 16-80x these
rates!!)
49Drugs Step 7 (cont.)
- Atorvastatin great LDL TG lowering
- Lovastatin take w/ food generic version
- Pravastatin least drug interactions due to
different elimination pathway take on empty
stomach - Simvastatin lots of prevention data, potent
- Fluvastatin less potent poor prevention data
- Rosuvastatin most potent 5 - 40 mg (CRESTOR)
may raise HDL a bit more lower TG. Caution w/
CrCllt30cc/min and in Asian subpopulations at
higher doses.
50Statin Pearls
- Elevated transaminases on statins (unless
reaching 3x normal), are not a reason to stop the
statin they are are a reason to watch closely. - Statin side effects are often agent specific, not
always class specific. - Unexplained myalgias may occur on statins without
CK elevation. Try a different statin.
51Statin Pearls
- Rhabdomyolysis is uncommon unless CK is elevated
to 10 x normal. Usually occurs in patients with
multiple co-morbidities. - Unless you enjoy driving yourself nuts do not
check CK serially in patients on statins.
Remember vigorous yard work will bump your CK!
Some think a baseline CK may be helpful. - But what about the PROVE-IT study? (NEJM 8
April 2004)
52 PROVE-IT Trial
- Designed to PROVE that 80mg atorvastatin was no
better than 40 mg pravastatin in secondary
prevention. - But, atorvastatin was superior as early as 30
days of therapy. In just 24 mths the
atorvastatin group (meanLDL62) had 16 less of
all CV events. 28 less mortality than
pravastatin group (meanLDL95)
53PROVE-IT Trial
- WOW!
- Evidence from mammalian species had shown that
atherogenesis stops reverses at an LDL lt80
now some clinical outcome data.
54NCEP Update 13 July 2004
- Circulation 13 July 2004227-239
- Added the results of PROVE-IT, HPS, PROSPER,
ALLHAT, ASCOT - Confirmed ATP-III and added that in very high
risk an LDL goal lt70 was optional - For patients at moderately high risk 10-20
Framingham risk LDL lt100 new goal - Felt that drug treatment should aim for at least
a 30-40 LDL reduction.
55Updated ATP-III Guidelines
RISK LDL TLC DRUGS
HIGH gt20 10yr lt70mg/dl Optional gt100mg/dl gt100mg/dl or lt100mg
Mod. High 10-20 lt100mg/dl Optional gt130mg/dl gt130mg/dl or 100-130
Moderate lt10 10yr lt130mg/dl gt130mg/dl gt160mg/dl
LOW lt160mg/dl gt160mg/dl gt190mg/dl
56TNT StudyTreat to New Targets
- NEJM 7 April 2005 Prospective trial at lowering
LDL well below 100mg/dl in adults with CHD
(secondary prevention) - 10,001 patients 2 groups for 4.9 years with mean
LDL 99mg/dl before study - 10 mg atorvastatin (mean LDL101mg/dl)
- 80 mg atorvastain (mean LDL77mg/dl)
57TNT - Results
- Side Effects increased LFTs in 0.2 of patients
on low dose and 1.2 on high dose. No change in
rhabdomyolysis risk. - Results Relative risk reduction of 22 and
absolute risk reduction of 2.2 in major
cardiovascular events for group with LDL lt80
versus group with LDL101. - More evidence to lower our LDL goals
58NCEP/ATP III Step 8
- Identify Metabolic Syndrome (3 of 5)
- SBPgt130, FBSgt110, TGgt150, HDLlt40 in men and lt50
in women, waistgt40men, 35women - Aggressively
- Treat underlying causes of overweight and
physical inactivity. - Treat HTN, use ASA for CHD patients
59NCEP/ATP III Step 9
- Treat elevated TG (gt150mg/dl)
- First lower LDL if TG still gt200 consider
adding/increasing drug therapy - But, if TG gt500mg/dl, first lower triglycerides
to prevent pancreatitis. When they are lt500 then
return to LDL lowering - Treat HDL lt40 after lowering LDL.
60CASES
- All real cases. No perfect answers.
- All present real Family Practice dilemmas.
- Will use the evidence to help formulate a best
answer. - Use cases to convey cutting edge info.
61Case 4 Middle-of the Road
- 45 year old woman who on a routine lipid screen
has the following values - TC 203 HDL48 TG 155 LDL 124
- PMHx negative, smoker
- Meds daily vitamin
- FHx MI in F age 60, M age 64
- PE 65 130lbs P72 BP118/68
62Case 4 Middle of the Road
- Risk Factors 2 Framingham 5 risk
- NCEP/ATP III says that she is at her LDL goal
e.g. lt130 - But, concerns remain FHx, Smoking, HDL is lt50
TG gt150 both less than ideal. - What do you do with this middle-of-the-road
risk profile?
63Case 4 Middle of the Road
- Consider a new idea measure her hs-CRP
- Facts CRP is a marker of inflammation.
- ASCVD is a disease of inflammation
- Multiple prospective epidemiological (vs.
interventional studies) have shown that CRP can
predict MI,CVA, PAD, sudden cardiac death.
64Case 4 Middle of the Road
- Hs-CRP assays are now widely available can check
non-fasting, anytime of day. - lt 1mg/l low risk
- 1-3mg/l moderate risk
- gt3mg/l high risk
- gt10mg/l invalid for cardiac risk
predictionconsider 1 inflammatory disease,
trauma, serious infection.
65Case 4 Middle of the Road
- PRINCE (PRavastatin INflammation/Crp Evaluation
trial JAMA 200128664-70. And other trials have
proven that Statins lower CRP 15-25 within 6
weeks of initiation. - Weight loss, exercise and smoking cessation also
lower CRP.
66Case 4 Middle of the Road
- CARE AFCAPS/TEXCAPS both suggest that the
benefit of statin therapy among those with low
LDL but high CRP may be as large as those with
overt hyperlipidemia. - How to answer this ?
- 2003 15,000 patients with LDLlt130 but CRP above
2.0mg/l (JUPITER). All will be put on CRESTOR
for prevention. What will happen?
67Case 4 Middle of the Road
- What does this mean for our patient?
- CRP is most useful in those judged at
intermediate risk and in primary prevention. - Review 45 yr old woman with an LDLlt130 but FHX
and other borderline riskseg a 5 Framingham
risk - HOW about checking an hs-CRP to further assess
her risk ?
68Case 4 Middle of the Road
- CRP 3.2mg/l HIGH risk
- Studies have proven she is in fact at risk more
than her LDL would tell us. What to do? - Smoking cessation will lower CRP
- Statins will lower her CRP
- But, no prospective proof that this will change
her outcome. It is your call, Doctor!
69Other Novel Risk Factors
- EBCT (coronary Ca score)
- Lp (a) lipoprotein, Apo B, LDL particle size
- Homocysteine
- Plasma Adiponectin
70EBCT/Coronary Ca scores
- Coronary Ca occurs due to ASCVD
- Normal score0-10 11-100 mild disease, 101-400
non-obstructive disease, gt400 obstructive - Significant false positives and poor data in
women and younger patients - It may not provide incremental information above
that obtained with conventional risk factor
assessment it is an alternative.
71EBCT
- Like with hs-CRP, it is not very useful in low
risk or very high risk patients. It significantly
correlates w/ cheaper hs-CRP. - Best used in intermediate risk folks where it
might change treatment approach. - In patients w/ intermediate risk an EBCT score
gt80 has a sensitivity of 85 and a specificity of
75 for the risk of events.
72EBCT/Coronary Ca Scores
- USPSTF Feb 2004 D recommendation for adults
at low risk. absence of evidence that detection
ultimately results in improved health outcomes,
and because false positive tests are likely to
cause harm - I recommendation for those at high risk
73Homocysteine
- High plasma homocysteine may be directly related
to atherosclerosis development. - Homocysteine may enhance inflammation
thrombosis. - There may be no causal association between
elevated homocysteine and CV disease risk. - New Evidence!!
74Homocysteine
- NEJM 13 April 2006 2 studies re homocysteine
lowering - 1 Secondary prevention 5522 patients placebo
vs 2,5mg FolateB6B12 did not reduce the risk
of cardiovascular event, more pts in Tx had
unstable angina. - 2 3749 pts post-MI treatment with B-vitamins
did not lower risk of recurrent CV disease. A
harmful effect of B-vitamin Tx was suggested.
75Lipid Sub-fractions other markers
- Lipoprotein a, Apolipoprotein B, LDL particle
size - All have predictive value for CHD, indeed LDL
particle size is more precise than LDL alone. But
not widely available, expensive, less
reproducible and still no outcome studies.
76Case 5 The Unreachable Goal
- 60 yr old male returns to see you 3 months after
a 4vCABG. He feels great. At his last visit
with his CT surgeon he was told follow-up with
your family doctor to get your cholesterol in
control - PMHX HTN x 20 yrs, BPH, ED, mild OA
- MEDS ASA, Metoprolol 50 mg po bid, Viagra,
- Simvastatin 20 mg po qd
- FHX F with CVA at 68
77Case 5 The Unreachable Goal
- PE 70 160lbs P60 BP124/76
- Cor RRR, no m/r/g, no jvd, healed median
sternotomy scar - Ext no edema
Lungs slight dec. breath sounds - TC180, HDL42 TG100 LDL118
78Case 5 The Unreachable Goal
- Risk Assessment he has CHD 2 prev.
- Goal LDL is lt100 per ATP III (lt70-80 TNT trial
data and ATP update) - At this level atherogenesis seems to arrest
- At an LDL of 80 in mammalian species
atherogenesis reverses. Also the PROVE-IT trial
shows that an LDL of 62 was superior to an LDL of
95.
79Case 5 The Unreachable Goal
- You decide to increase the simvastatin to 40mg po
qd. - 6 weeks later TC 170 TG105 HDL42 LDL107
- What do you do?
80Case 5 The Unreachable Goal
- Many options 1)increase simvastatin to 80 mg or
change to atorvastatin or rosuvastatin. - PROBLEM inc risk of side effects and less LDL
lowering effect as you inc statin doses. For
every doubling of dose, LDL decreases by only 6
. A threefold higher dose by 12 and a fourfold
increase lowers LDL cholesterol by only 18.
81Case 5 The Unreachable Goal
- 2.) Add Ezetimibe 10 mg po qd less chance of
side effects should help to reach goal LDL
easily. - 3.) Intensify diet Ornish Plan add soluble
fiber, add soy, add omega-3 fatty acids. - 4.) Be satisfied and await more trials
82Summary
- 8 Points to make you strong
- 1) 1 2 prevention of
- ASCVD are possible!
- 2) NCEP/ATP III at
- www.nhlbi.nih.gov is useful.
- 3) The key step is risk assessment then
tailoring treatment to individual risk.
83Summary 8 Points
- 3) Better medication options are a help
Ezetimibe, Advicor, new statins and a cleaner
understanding of statin side effects - 4)Attack the metabolic syndrome!! A multi-modal
treatment plan is best. - 5) Dont ignore a chance for prevention because
your patient is gt70 or lt35.
84Summary 8 Points
- 6) hs-CRP is a powerful new tool to predict risk
especially in those at intermediate risk. - But, we need prospective proof that lowering
it will help reduce ASCVD endpoints. - 7) Try to get to goal anticipate new ATP-IV
guidelines. -
-
85Thanks for your Attention!