The figures I work to are some I picked up in 2004 when I first started the Atkins diet. I think they may have been the NICE guidelines at the time, though I'm not sure about that.
Preferred targets:
Total: below 5.18. 5.18 to 6.20 is medium
HDL: target - above 1.04, and the higher the better
Triglycerides (the real baddies) target - below 1.70; the lower the better. Above 5.65 is Very High.
LDL (also bad, but more complicated) is calculated from the other figures; mine is 3.60, which is on the higher side of okay.
My total cholesterol:HDL ratio is 4.1, which again is on the higher side of okay. My LDL:HDL is 2.77 - ditto.
If you Google 'total cholesterol HDL ratio' you'll get some good sites. All the info is out there.
Ask your doctor to give you a print-out of your full lipid profile (which is the breakdown as above) so you can study it. Don't let your surgery try to charge you - these are your medical records and you have a right to see them.
All the laboratories in this country differ a little, but they often give you their own 'acceptable' ranges on the print-outs.
Ask what all the figures mean. Don't let them fob you off with statins without explaining what they are and why they want you to take them. Find out which version of statin they are giving you. Take them away, if it keeps the peace, but research them thoroughly before you take them.
Statins work extremely well for some people; others can have problems. I was on SImvastatin for 3 years and ended up barely able to walk because of muscle weakness. Check on 'statin side-effects'. Read all the pro-statin sites, but also have a look at some of the anti. 'spacedoc.net' is interesting; so is a lady called 'stephanie seneff'. Googling 'seneff' should find her; she's at MIT.
'They' will probably tell you that diabetics are more prone to cardio-vascular disease and strokes. 'They' may well be right, but they are working from statistics gathered over the past few decades, when diabetes was much less well-controlled. I have a theory that a well-controlled diabetic need be at no higher risk of CVD etc than anyone else in the population. If you're an obese couch potato who drinks, smokes and eats a bad diet, you're at high risk of all sorts of things, diabetic or not! (At least I don't smoke - the diet's not bad either :lol: :lol: )
If I'm wrong about that, you have my permission to say so on my tombstone 8)
There is a strong (official) rumour that statins can occasionally cause impotence :twisted:
See what your figures are, listen to what 'they' say, do your own research and make up your own mind.
Viv