The gist of the video was that calcified plague is less likely to rupture than softer un-calcified plaque because it is covered in a hard shell of calcium, I have done a QRISK3 and have a 15% chance due to having kidney issues - so I guess that justifies statins although I am still more motivated to reduce my numbers by low carbs and exercise etc.What happens to the calcified unstable plaque? What happens with unstable plaque if it isn't calcified?
I'm assuming you haven't been tested to see if there is any buildup of plaque in your arteries. Preventive medicine is important, but it's for you to judge whether you are happy with that particular offer - after all, we could each be taking buckets of drugs to prevent lots of diseases we were never going to get anyway. It's your decision what you do or don't do.
I also had high trigs (6+ )Would appreciate peoples views and expertise on Statins/ Vitamin K2 and calcium in the blood.
I am pre-diabetic and as a consequence my GP is determined to get me on Statins. After a lot of pressure a few months ago I agreed but within days my readings had risen a fair bit – even for low carb meals and so after a week I came off them much to the annoyance of my GP. The issue is my total cholesterol is 4.8 but my HDL is a low 0.7 my LDL 2.5 but my Triglycerides a ridiculous 8.0. I do need to get the Trig's down and I have reduced carbs and made lifestyle changes which I hope will have a good impact.
Apart from statins increasing my glucose levels I have also resisted statins because I understood they increase blood calcium levels and I understood this to be a bad thing and that taking vitamin K2 was effective in decreasing calcium levels in the blood which was good. HOWEVER, I have just watched a video on Youtube that advocates statins do increase calcium in the blood BUT this is a good thing since it calcifies unstable plaque and actually makes in safer thereby reducing potential heart attacks.
I am now totally confused which is correct and whether statins are not the evil I assumed.
Comments would be greatly appreciated.
Interesting.Read this today - may be of interest @andyR57 https://diatribe.org/triglycerides-and-diabetes?omhide=true
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