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Results for search "Heart / Stroke-Related: High Cholesterol".

31 Oct

Teenage Weight-Loss Surgery Leads to Long-Lasting Health Benefits, New Study Finds

A new study finds obese teens who undergo bariatric surgery sustain major health benefits 10 years after the procedure -- including remission from type 2 diabetes, significant weight loss and lower blood pressure.

28 Aug

Cholesterol Changes During Menopause May Explain Increase in Heart Disease

A new study finds women going through menopause experience an increase in “bad” cholesterol and a decrease in “good” cholesterol.

Health News Results - 62

20 Nov
About 1 in 10 U.S. Adults Have High Cholesterol

About 1 in 10 U.S. Adults Have High Cholesterol

Nearly 1 in every 10 American adults is living with high levels of cholesterol in their arteries, according to the latest report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The data, from 2021 through 2023, found that 11.3% of adults have high total cholest...

11 Nov
Diabetes & Kidney Trouble Can Bring Heart Disease Decades Earlier

Diabetes & Kidney Trouble Can Bring Heart Disease Decades Earlier

People with both type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney disease face a heart health double-whammy, a new study says.

Men with both diabetes and kidney disease will develop

02 Sep
New Blood Test Could Predict Women's 30-year Risk for Heart Disease

New Blood Test Could Predict Women's 30-year Risk for Heart Disease

Could a simple blood test help predict a woman’s three-decade risk of heart disease?

Yes, claims new research that found women with ...

27 Aug
Cholesterol Could Be Link Between Menopause and Heart Disease

Cholesterol Could Be Link Between Menopause and Heart Disease

During menopause, a woman’s blood cholesterol changes in a way that could harm her heart health, a new study warns.

An increase in “bad” LDL cholesterol and a decrease in “good” HDL cholesterol occurs during menopause, according to research ...

08 Aug
Fish Oil Might Help Keep Cholesterol in Check

Fish Oil Might Help Keep Cholesterol in Check

People with a genetic predisposition for high cholesterol can lower their levels by taking fish oil supplements, a new study shows.

The results ind...

13 Nov
Two New Studies Point to the Promise of Gene Therapy for High Cholesterol

Two New Studies Point to the Promise of Gene Therapy for High Cholesterol

MONDAY, Nov. 13, 2023 (Healthday News) -- Two new gene-editing treatments that target dangerously high levels of cholesterol in people with a genetic predisposition to the condition were found safe and effective in new, groundbreaking research.

While powerful drugs like ...

22 Sep
Brain Trauma Could Help Trigger Heart Troubles

Brain Trauma Could Help Trigger Heart Troubles

While the neurological impact of a traumatic brain injury (TBI) has long been studied, new research suggests TBIs are also hard on the heart.

The research team took a closer look at connections between the two organs, finding that nervous system dysfunction, neuro-infla...

26 Jul
Vegetarian Diet May Be the Best Bet for Those at High Risk for Heart Disease

Vegetarian Diet May Be the Best Bet for Those at High Risk for Heart Disease

As more people are advised to shun meat, a new study from Australia adds to evidence that a vegetarian diet can help improve heart health.

A review of 20 prior investigations found that folks who followed a vegetarian diet for six months, on average, saw improvements in ...

26 Jul
Minorities, Women Are Shortchanged When It Comes to Statins

Minorities, Women Are Shortchanged When It Comes to Statins

In yet another example of inequities in U.S. health care, new research indicates that many women and minority men who need statins to protect their heart aren't getting them.

"The recommendation to use statins to treat and prevent atherosclerotic cardiovascular dis...

18 Jul
Weekend Warriors Aren't Exercising in Vain, at Least When It Comes to Their Heart

Weekend Warriors Aren't Exercising in Vain, at Least When It Comes to Their Heart

It doesn't matter if you exercise every day or squeeze it all into the weekend. If you do the recommended 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity a week, you'll get heart benefits, a new study finds.

Both regimens protect you from atrial fibrillation (a-fi...

14 Jul
Could the Bacteria in Your Gut Play a Part in How Clogged Your Arteries Are?

Could the Bacteria in Your Gut Play a Part in How Clogged Your Arteries Are?

Your gut bacteria could affect your risk for the fatty deposits in heart arteries -- and future heart attacks, researchers say.

A new study finds a link between the levels of certain microbes in the gut and these coronary atherosclerotic plaques.

Led by researchers...

12 May
Whether or Not You Get Heart-Healthy Statins May Depend on Race

Whether or Not You Get Heart-Healthy Statins May Depend on Race

Millions of Americans take cholesterol-lowering drugs called statins, but a new study finds Black and Hispanic adults get the drugs less often than white people do.

"This adds to the known racial and ethnic disparities already highly prevalent in heart disease,"said lead...

21 Mar
Health in a Nutshell: Daily Nut Consumption Could Help Your Heart

Health in a Nutshell: Daily Nut Consumption Could Help Your Heart

One way to reduce the risk of heart disease: Eat more nuts and seeds, according to a new review of 60 studies.

Scandinavian researchers found that eating nuts could reduce the risk of a heart attack.

"If you eat a handful of nuts every day, that is around 30 grams,...

06 Mar
Nexletol Could Be Alternative Cholesterol Med for Folks Who Can't Take Statins

Nexletol Could Be Alternative Cholesterol Med for Folks Who Can't Take Statins

Not everyone can tolerate statins to reduce their high cholesterol, but now a new study finds the medication bempedoic acid (Nexletol) reduced the combined rate of bad cardiovascular events by 13%.

"We're very pleased with the results,"said study chair

28 Feb
1 in 5 Folks at High Heart Risk Refuse to Take a Statin

1 in 5 Folks at High Heart Risk Refuse to Take a Statin

Twenty percent of folks who are at high risk for heart disease refuse statins that could help prevent it, researchers report.

They found that women were about 20% more likely than men to decline statin drugs when they were first recommended and about 50% more likely to n...

27 Feb
Daily Marijuana Use Now Linked to Heart Risks

Daily Marijuana Use Now Linked to Heart Risks

New research suggests that smoking weed is far from benign: Toking every day might raise your odds of heart disease.

The increased risk is not insignificant. Daily marijuana users are about one-third more likely to develop coronary artery disease, compared with people wh...

14 Feb
5 Foods to Boost Your Heart Health

5 Foods to Boost Your Heart Health

Keeping your heart healthy has numerous benefits, including a reduced risk for coronary heart disease, stroke,

06 Feb
Understanding Your Cholesterol Numbers

Understanding Your Cholesterol Numbers

You might not think about your cholesterol very often, if ever, but it's important to know your numbers.

It's even helpful to get it checked at a young age, according to one heart expert.

"People in their 20s may never consider getting their cholesterol checked, bu...

29 Nov
How Persistent Asthma Might Harm the Heart

How Persistent Asthma Might Harm the Heart

Persistent asthma may take a toll on the heart, not just the lungs, a new study suggests.

When the respiratory condition is relentless, it appears tied to plaque in the carotid arteries, increasing the risk for heart attack and stroke, researchers say.

The car...

07 Nov
6 'Heart-Healthy' Supplements Flop in Cholesterol Study

6 'Heart-Healthy' Supplements Flop in Cholesterol Study

Folks taking dietary supplements intended to help their heart health are just wasting their money, a new clinical trial suggests.

Six supplements widely promoted as heart-healthy -- fish oil, cinnamon, garlic, turmeric, plant sterols and red yeast rice -- didn't do a thi...

07 Nov
Experimental Pill May Be New Way to Control Cholesterol

Experimental Pill May Be New Way to Control Cholesterol

Millions of people take daily medication to lower their cholesterol levels and prevent heart attacks, but there hasn't been a drug that targets a dangerous type of cholesterol in the blood known as lipoprotein(a), or Lp(a).

That's why a new study of an investigational dr...

07 Nov
Is Surgery Always Necessary for Folks With Chronic Angina?

Is Surgery Always Necessary for Folks With Chronic Angina?

Folks suffering chest pain from clogged arteries appear to have some true flexibility in choosing the medical care that's right for them, researchers report.

That's because their overall risk of death is about the same whether they choose aggressive surgical treatment or...

13 Oct
COVID Drug Paxlovid Might Interact With Heart Meds

COVID Drug Paxlovid Might Interact With Heart Meds

The COVID-19 antiviral Paxlovid has been a game-changer in the global pandemic, shielding high-risk patients from the coronavirus' most devastating effects.

But

29 Aug
Biggest Study Yet Finds No Link Between Statins, Muscle Aches

Biggest Study Yet Finds No Link Between Statins, Muscle Aches

Cholesterol-lowering statins are proven lifesavers, but they've also gained a reputation for causing muscle aches and pains in a good number of patients.

That reputation is undes...

05 Aug
Loneliness Can Be a Real Heartbreaker, Cardiac Experts Warn

Loneliness Can Be a Real Heartbreaker, Cardiac Experts Warn

Social isolation and loneliness put people at a 30% higher risk of heart attack, stroke or death from either, a new scientific statement from the American Heart Association (AHA) warns.

The statement also highlights the lack of data on interventions that could improve he...

02 Aug
Red Meat Raises Your Heart Risk, and Scientists May Know Why

Red Meat Raises Your Heart Risk, and Scientists May Know Why

A daily hamburger might raise the risk of developing heart disease, but not necessarily for the reasons people often think, new research suggests.

The study of nearly 4,000 older Ame...

02 Aug
8/8 -- Self-Employed Women Are Often Healthier: Study

8/8 -- Self-Employed Women Are Often Healthier: Study

Women who are their own bosses might have healthier hearts to show for it, a new study suggests.

The study, of more than 4,600 working U.S. women, found that those who were self-employed typically got more exercise and were less likely to be

21 Jul
Post-Workout Sauna Might Boost Your Health Even More

Post-Workout Sauna Might Boost Your Health Even More

Next time you work out, maybe take a 15-minute sauna when you're done for extra heart health benefits.

That's the main finding of research out of Finland. It found taking a sauna confers additional cardiovascular benefits over exercise alone.

The new study didn't l...

19 Jul
Fewer Americans Are Dying of Heart Disease Than a Decade Ago

Fewer Americans Are Dying of Heart Disease Than a Decade Ago

Deaths from heart-related causes have dropped over the past 20 years, though differences persist by race and ethnicity as well as where people live and their access to care.

The U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH), which partially funded the research, detailed the r...

05 Jul
Only 7% of American Adults in Good Cardiometabolic Health

Only 7% of American Adults in Good Cardiometabolic Health

Less than 7% of U.S. adults are in good cardiometabolic shape, and new research warns the trend is only getting worse.

Cardiometabolic health is an umbrella term t...

16 Jun
Boomers Sicker Than Their Parents Were at Same Age

Boomers Sicker Than Their Parents Were at Same Age

There's some discouraging news for baby boomers.

Americans born between 1948 and 1965 are more likely than the generations that preceded them to have multiple health problems as they age, a

09 Jun
No Sign 1 Year of Testosterone Supplements Cause Heart Trouble: Study

No Sign 1 Year of Testosterone Supplements Cause Heart Trouble: Study

One year of testosterone therapy for men with low levels of the hormone does not appear to increase their risk for heart problems, British researchers found.

"We were unable to find evidence ... that testosterone increases risks of mortality or cardiovascular and/or cere...

08 Jun
Surviving Childhood Cancer Can Take Toll on Adult Heart

Surviving Childhood Cancer Can Take Toll on Adult Heart

Adult survivors of childhood cancer have a higher risk of heart problems than other adults, but are much less likely to be treated for heart disease risk factors such as high blood pressure, diabetes and high cholesterol, new research shows.

The findings highlight the ne...

18 May
Gene Tests Could Spot 1 Million Americans at Risk of High Cholesterol

Gene Tests Could Spot 1 Million Americans at Risk of High Cholesterol

A combination of genetic testing and health screenings could identify more than 1 million U.S. adults with an inherited risk for a cholesterol disorder that increases their risk for premature heart attack and death, according to a new study.

About 1 in 250 Americans may ...

04 May
Obesity May Be Affecting Heart Health in Kids as Young as 6

Obesity May Be Affecting Heart Health in Kids as Young as 6

As early as age 6, children who carry extra weight could be headed down a path toward future diabetes or heart disease, a new study suggests.

The study, of nearly...

28 Apr
Another Long-Term Health Issue Tied to Abuse in Childhood: Cholesterol

Another Long-Term Health Issue Tied to Abuse in Childhood: Cholesterol

The toll of child abuse is wide-ranging and long-lasting. Researchers warn that childhood abuse is tied to high cholesterol and type 2 diabetes in adulthood, raising odds for heart disease and stroke.

In contrast, those who grew up in nurturing homes are less likely to h...

25 Apr
Heart Risk Factors Can Be Recipe for Dementia

Heart Risk Factors Can Be Recipe for Dementia

The faster you pile up heart disease risk factors, the greater your odds of developing dementia, a new study suggests.

Previous research has linked heart health threats such as high blood pressure, diabetes and obesity with mental decline and dementia.

Amassing tho...

30 Mar
Avocados Do a Heart Good, Study Finds

Avocados Do a Heart Good, Study Finds

Avocado toast has become the favored breakfast of the healthy and fit, and now new research suggests their choice may protect their hearts.

People who ate half an avocado t...

24 Mar
Drink Up!  Daily Coffee Tied to Longer, Healthier Life

Drink Up!  Daily Coffee Tied to Longer, Healthier Life

In yet another finding that highlights the health perks coffee can brew, new studies show that having two to three cups a day not only wakes you up, it's also good for your heart and may help you live longer.

In this largest ever analysis of nearly 383,000 men and women ...

24 Mar
Statins Tied to Lower Risk of Parkinson's-Like Symptoms

Statins Tied to Lower Risk of Parkinson's-Like Symptoms

Millions of people taking statin drugs to lower their cholesterol may get an unanticipated benefit: They may be less likely to develop movement and balance problems like those seen in Parkinson's disease, a new study suggests.

The study looked at the relationship between...

17 Mar
People Are Now Living More Years in Good Health: Study

People Are Now Living More Years in Good Health: Study

Older adults may not only be living longer, but better as well, according to a new U.K. study.

Researchers found that since the 1990s, British adults age 65 and u...

17 Mar
Triglycerides a Stroke Danger, Even With Statin Treatment

Triglycerides a Stroke Danger, Even With Statin Treatment

Stroke survivors may be watching their "bad" cholesterol, but a new study suggests another type of blood fat could put them at risk of a repeat stroke within the next year.

Researchers found that stroke survivors with

16 Mar
Mammograms Can Also Highlight Heart Risks: Study

Mammograms Can Also Highlight Heart Risks: Study

Your annual screening mammogram may do more than spot breast cancer early - it may give you a heads up on your heart disease risk, too.

Digital breast X-rays...

04 Mar
Are Health Care Apps in Your Future?

Are Health Care Apps in Your Future?

Are you managing a chronic health problem, be it obesity or diabetes or heart disease or asthma?

There's likely an app for that.

Health apps are becoming more and more sop...

23 Feb
Too Many Americans Are Getting 'Low-Value' Medical Tests, Procedures

Too Many Americans Are Getting 'Low-Value' Medical Tests, Procedures

When your cardiologist orders a test, do you stop to ask why you need it? You probably don't - but perhaps you should, according to a new report from the American Heart Association (AHA).

Too many Americans receive heart tests and treatments that do little good, and more...

21 Feb
Study Finds No Heart Benefit From Veggies. Nutritionists Disagree.

Study Finds No Heart Benefit From Veggies. Nutritionists Disagree.

Eating vegetables may not help protect you against heart disease, according to a new study that's triggered strong reactions from critics.

The analysis of the diets of nearly...

27 Jan
Did Your Gene Screen Turn Up Dangerous DNA? Study Finds Real Risk Is Low

Did Your Gene Screen Turn Up Dangerous DNA? Study Finds Real Risk Is Low

Most gene variants that have been labeled "pathogenic" may make only a small difference in a person's risk of actually developing disease, a new study suggests.

Scouring genetic data on more than 72,000 individuals,

24 Jan
Worries May Raise Men's Heart Risks, Even When Young

Worries May Raise Men's Heart Risks, Even When Young

Worrying can take a toll on your psyche, but new research suggests that when middle-aged men fret too much, they face a higher risk for developing diabetes, heart disease or stroke down the road.

And this increase in risk is on par with the health risks linked to

06 Jan
Unhealthy Heart May Be Bigger Threat to Women's Brains Than Men's

Unhealthy Heart May Be Bigger Threat to Women's Brains Than Men's

What's good for the heart is good for the brain, and a new study suggests that connection might be especially critical for women.

The study, of more than 1,800 adults in their 50s and 60s, found that those with heart disease, or risk factors for it, generally showed a gr...

22 Dec
COVID Helps Drive Nearly Two-Year Decline in U.S. Life Expectancy

COVID Helps Drive Nearly Two-Year Decline in U.S. Life Expectancy

COVID-19 is now the third leading cause of death for Americans and has shortened life expectancy by nearly two years, a drop not seen since World War II, a new government report shows.

Life expectancy dropped from 78.8 in 2010 to 77 in 2020 as the age-adjusted death rat...

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