FREE SHIPPING for any order that exceeds $30!!!
 

Cholesterol Symptoms
Home Cholesterol Tests

Buy home cholesterol tests

What can you do about it?

Drug therapy can be considered for patients who, in spite of adequate dietary therapy, regular physical activity and weight loss, need further treatment for elevated blood cholesterol levels. Test your cholesterol levels with our home cholesterol tests. The guidelines for those who qualify are:

 

 LDL Level

 Goal

Without coronary heart disease and with fewer than two risk factors

 190 mg/dL or higher*

 160 mg/dL or lower

Without coronary heart disease and with two or more risk factors

 160 mg/dL or higher

 130 mg/dL or lower

With coronary heart disease

 130 mg/dL or higher**

 100 mg/dL or lower

*In men less than 35 years of age and premenopausal women with LDL cholesterol levels of 190 to 219 mg/dL, drug therapy should be delayed except in high-risk patients such as those with diabetes.

**In coronary heart disease patients with LDL cholesterol levels of 100 to 129 mg/dL, the physician should exercise clinical judgment in deciding whether to initiate drug treatment.
In some cases, a physician may decide that using cholesterol-lowering drugs at lower LDL cholesterol levels is justified. On the other hand, drug therapy may not be appropriate for some patients who meet the above criteria. This may be true for elderly patients.

The presence of other coronary heart disease risk factors influences the use of cholesterol-lowering drugs:

What drugs are most commonly used to treat high cholesterol?
The drugs of first choice for elevated LDL cholesterol are the bile acid sequestrants — cholestyramine and colestipol — and nicotinic acid (niacin). These have been shown to reduce the risk for coronary heart disease in controlled clinical trials. Both classes of drugs appear to be free of serious side effects, but both can have troublesome side effects and require considerable patient education to achieve adherence. Nicotinic acid is preferred in patients with triglyceride levels exceeding 250 mg/dL because bile acid sequestrants tend to raise triglyceride levels. Try our home cholesterol tests to check your levels.

Another class of drugs for lowering LDL is the HMG CoA reductase inhibitors, e.g., lovastatin, pravastatin and simvastatin. Statin drugs are very effective for lowering LDL cholesterol levels and have few immediate short-term side effects.

Long-term safety data (longer than five years) should be available in the next one to two years. Clinical trials are in progress. You can test your levels with our home cholesterol tests.

What other drugs are available to treat high cholesterol?
Other available drugs are gemfibrozil, probucol and clofibrate. Gemfibrozil and clofibrate are most effective for lowering elevated triglyceride levels. They moderately reduce LDL cholesterol levels in hypercholesterolemic patients, but the FDA hasn’t approved them for this purpose. Probucol also moderately lowers LDL levels. It has received FDA approval for this purpose.

If a patient doesn’t respond adequately to single drug therapy, combined drug therapy should be considered to further lower LDL cholesterol levels. For patients with severe hypercholesterolemia, combining a bile acid sequestrant with either nicotinic acid or lovastatin has the potential to markedly lower LDL cholesterol. For hypercholesterolemic patients with elevated triglycerides, nicotinic acid or gemfibrozil should be considered as one agent for combined therapy.

Buy home cholesterol tests

Goto Cholesterol Test & BioScanner Kits @Home

home cholesterol tests