By Brian Vonk, M.D.
You may have gotten to a point in your life where you're asking, "Where is my health going and why am I in this handbasket?" Or you may be saying, "I feel fine and want to make sure I stay that way."
The fact is, the majority of Americans older than 40 years already have a major health problem. Another disconcerting fact is that the majority of illnesses are subclinical, meaning they smolder under the surface for many years before they are recognized. Whatever your condition, sickness or apparent health, accurately assessing your current health is the proper place to start on your journey to vibrant health.
Since cardiovascular health is key to health in general -- and the lack of it is so common -- it is where I'd like to begin a health review. Heart disease is the #1 killer of Americans, followed, in order of prevalence, by cancer, stroke, emphysema, and accidents.
But every 34 seconds an American dies of heart disease!
Consequently, we all know someone with heart disease, or we have it ourselves. If you're interested in avoiding or ending personal experience with this disease, I have good news for you: the majority of the causes of cardiovascular disease are in our control.
The first and foundational step in gaining or maintaining cardiovascular health is accurately measuring your current condition. Once that is clearly understood, an effective treatment or preventative plan can be made. In this article, we'll review the most important factors indicating cardiovascular health or disease. Collect the information and grade yourself.
Most of us have had our blood drawn to determine our cholesterol level. That number alone, however, is actually quite useless.
There is a huge amount of misinformation about cholesterol, leaving most people thinking it is the grinch who steals youthful vitality. The truth is cholesterol is vital for health and we'd all be dead without it.
We get disease if cholesterol is too high or too low. But in the broad range of cholesterol levels from 180 to 240 there is no correlation with heart disease. Below 180 there is increased risk of hemorrhagic stroke, depression, and suicide. Above 240 there is increased risk of cardiovascular disease and ischemic stroke. Over age 70, elevated cholesterol and cardiovascular events no longer correlate. All told, total serum cholesterol alone is a poor indicator of cardiovascular disease. Half of all heart attack patients have normal total cholesterol levels.
So why are doctors recommending statin drugs for cholesterol levels above 200?
Ask the pharmaceutical companies who sponsor the drug studies and also help determine what normal cholesterol levels are. The upper limit of normal total cholesterol recently went down from 220 to 200, creating "disease" in additional millions of Americans. How convenient that the drug companies just so happen to have the "cure" for that disease!
I want to help you avoid that treatment trap. In fairness, compared to many drugs, most of the statin drugs are some of the safer drugs you might take and actually have the beneficial effects of being powerful antioxidant and anti-inflammatory agents. These beneficial features are likely the reason studies show decreased cardiac deaths when they are used.
Nevertheless, the statin drugs' potential side effects are significant. In some they deplete coenzyme Q 10 within the liver enough to cause liver enzyme elevations and within the muscles to cause myopathy. Also, and this is not published to my knowledge, but in my and several of my physician colleagues' experiences, statins cause depression or loss of motivation in the majority of patients, probably due to alteration of cholesterol metabolism in the brain. As a result, many of these patients are also on SSRI (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor) drugs (eg Zoloft, Paxil, Prosac).
What is it worth to you to avoid depression and loss of motivation?
There are far safer ways to decrease cardiac deaths and treat abnormal cholesterol levels without risking drug side effects. Depite this, you would be astounded how many patients would rather take a pill with potential severe side effects than consider changing anything else.
As noted above, total serum cholesterol doesn't correlate with cardiovascular disease in the range of 180 to 240 but certain fractions of that total cholesterol do correlate. These fractions are HDL and LDL cholesterol. This is why you need a Lipid Profile (also called a Lipid Panel) and not just a total cholesterol when you get your blood drawn.
I have compiled two tables below listing the components of cholesterol (ie the Lipid Profile) as well as listing several other markers for cardiovascular health and disease. The first table has the usually quoted normal levels and the second table has ideal levels. Normal levels can change depending upon the levels found in the majority of the population as well as upon what health officials decide is normal. Ideal levels are those which reflect health. We want the ideal levels for optimal wellness not just normal.
All of the markers listed in the tables are important. For example, you can have normal HDL/Chol ratio, normal homocysteine, normal fasting glucose, but have ferritin outside the ideal range and have cardiovascular disease as a result. It only takes one rascal to spill the beans.
Cardiovascular Disease Markers:
These are the declared "normal" levels that your doctor will use to tell you whether your various serum/blood levels are "normal" (NOTE: These levels do NOT necessarily mean healthy levels, rather these will include healthy and many very unhealthy patients):
Triglycerides (mg/dL)
C-Reactive Protein(CRP)
Normal range = Below 10 mg/L (1 mg/dL)
Homocysteine
Normal range = Below 17 micromoles/L
Lipoprotein a (Lp a)
Ferritin
Fibrinogen
Blood glucose(8hr fast)
Normal = <120 mg/dL Borderline DM = 120-140 mg/dL Diabetic = Above 140 mg/dL (W.H.O. definition)
Insulin (8 hr fasting)
The following serum levels are the most IDEAL (ie. beneficial) levels for cardiovascular (CV) health. Having any ONE of these outside the ideal range can cause or indicate CV disease! These ideal or healthy levels are much tighter than the often quoted "normal" levels referred to by your doctor. Remember "normal" does NOT necessarily mean "healthy". We want healthy, not just normal:
HDL Cholesterol
LDL Cholesterol
HDL % or Ratios
Triglycerides(TG)
Lipoprotein(a)ieLp(a)**
* Cholesterol: It is not advisable to have total cholesterol below 150 at any age due to increased risk for internal hemorrhage, depression, and suicide.
Note: A mneumonic to help you remember that LDL is the "BAD" cholesterol: LDL = Low Down Loathsome cholesterol.
** Lp(a): LDL + APO(a) = Lp(a). Artery blockage (plaque) is composed of 90-100% Lp(a) NOT of ordinary cholesterol. Lp(a) is a substitute for ascorbate (Vitamin C). If you are not getting enough Vitamin C to produce collagen for tissue repair, when your arteries become injured they cannot heal properly. If there is inadequate Vitamin C, the next best way to repair your arterial injuries is make a Lp(a) plaque to cover the injury. Unfortunately the plaques tend to continue to grow. Simply removing plaque without restoring the artery to health is like tearing a scab off a wound. You do not want to remove the scab until after the tissue underneath has started healing. Your body needs sufficient Vitamin C so your arteries can heal. Elevated homocysteine can also play a role here and is detrimental because it causes the binding of Lp(a) to fibrin in very low concentrations thereby encouraging plaque formation in the vessel walls. *** HbA1C (also called glycosylated hemoglobin) correlates well with your average blood sugar over the last 3 months. Tight blood sugar control makes a HUGE difference in complications in diabetics and prediabetics. When A1C levels are elevated above 6.5, for every 1 percent reduction in A1C levels there is a 14 percent to 40 percent decrease in diabetes-related complications! Diabetics with A1C levels of 6.5 or lower only need to have the test repeated every six months. Those with higher levels should be tested every two to three months until levels drop to 6.5 or lower, while they make corrections with improved diet and additional diabetes medication. Most diabetics have the disease for 10 years before it is diagnosed, but it has silently been doing damage for all those years.
Besides obtaining blood work, your doctor has other tests he can order to determine your cardiovascular state including resting EKG, treadmill stress test, CT coronary calcium scoring, echocardiogram, nuclear medicine scans, and coronary angiography. These are useful if you have known or suspected disease; however, as you advance from non-invasive to invasive studies there are increased risks for the tests themselves. There is a one in one thousand chance of dying from a coronary angiogram. This is an average. In your doctor's hands you may have a much lower risk but it also could be much higher. These tests must be used wisely.
You obviously need to go to a doctor if you want to get the appropriate blood work and the other procedures listed above. But there are "low tech" and yet very useful evaluations you can do on your own which also help determine your cardiovascular risk.
The "low-tech" cardiovascular evaluations
Ankle-Arm Index: This is also called Ankle-Brachial Index (ABI) and is the ratio of the ankle systolic blood pressure* divided by the arm systolic blood pressure. A normal index is 1.0 and below 0.9 indicates cardiovascular disease.
I mention this test because you may have heard of it, but be aware that it has limited value. The potential weakness of the test is that it tends to be falsely normal in people with calcifications in their arteries, people with diabetes, pre-diabetes, or those with Vitamin K deficiency. Millions of Americans are pre-diabetic or diabetic and most of them don't even know it. Also, recent studies indicate that significant Vitamin K deficiency is becoming common.
So, if the Ankle-Arm Index is normal you must exclude these causes of arterial calcification before you can assume the test is truly normal. If the test is abnormal, you have some degree of cardiovascular disease.
* Ankle pressure is taken with the cuff just above the ankle and the stethoscope listening just below the cuff on the inner side of the ankle immediately behind the ankle bone.
Basal Body Temperature: This is a test of your core body temperature and is a very useful test to determine if your thyroid hormonal system is underactive (ie hypothyroid).
What does being hypothyroid have to do with cardiovascular disease?
Hypothyroidism causes abnormal lipid metabolism which results in accelerated cardiovascular disease. Cholesterol and other lipids can become elevated due to diminished function of lipid metabolism enzymes caused by the lower body temperatures. Many body enzymes are highly temperature dependent, malfunctioning at abnormally low or high temperatures. The more abnormal the temperature, the more malfunctional the enzyme. On a molecular basis, this is why we become listless as our body temperatures go out of the normal range and we die at temperature extremes.
Although the frequency of hypothyroidism has been hotly debated for many decades, I am convinced that hypothyroidism is common and often unrecognized. The official normal range of thyroid blood tests are virtually useless except for obvious hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism. These blood tests are useful if much tighter normal ranges are used. Additionally, accurate assessments of thyroid function can be obtained with basal body temperatures.
Ideally body temperature is taken immediately upon awakening and while still in bed, but it can be taken during the day at least 15 minutes after eating or drinking and when you haven't been exercising. Men and post-menopausal women can take their temperatures on any day but menstruating women have some restrictions. Their temperature fluctuates with their menstrual cycle, lowest at ovulation and highest just before menstrual flow. They can most accurately measure the temperature on the second and third day of the period after the flow begins. Normal temperatures are: Armpit 98.0 +/- 0.2, Oral 98.6 +/- 0.2, and Rectal 99.0 +/- 0.2 degrees Fahrenheit.
Another useful assessment is an exceedingly low-tech question, "Do you tend to be very hot or cold when most others are not"? Characteristically, hypothyroid patients are very "cold blooded" and are cold to their core even when wearing warm clothes. As a corollary, these patients rarely can create any significant sweat. As an aside, two other conditions that can cause low body temperature are adrenal exhaustion and profound hypoglycemia but these diagnoses are usually quite obvious.
Waist size: There are many cardiovascular risk formulas and ratios that use your waist measurement, but one of the simplest is also one of the most accurate:
Your waist size in inches should not be greater than one half your height in inches. The greater your abdominal girth relative to your height, the greater your risk of cardiovascular disease.
Insurance companies are good at making money because their actuaries are very knowledgeable in determining risks. Why do you think they insist on knowing your height and waist measurements as part of your insurance physical? Increased abdominal girth is a strong indicator of hyperinsulinemia, pre-diabetes, and diabetes and consequently a useful indicator of cardiovascular disease.
Summary: We have reviewed several of the most important indicators of cardiovascular health and disease. As Goethe aptly stated, what one knows, one sees. You now have a knowledge of cardiovascular health and disease that few others have. You are equipped to see what most will overlook.
If you passed most or all of these tests in flying colors, congratulations, your risk of cardiovascular disease is very low.
If you underperformed on many of these tests, now is the time to do something about it. As long as there is life, there is hope. You will find instructions on what to do about abnormal cardiovascular tests in past and future articles here on the website, but the most basic intervention always is maximizing our daily nutrition.
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20% Of Heart Attacks Go Undetected -- How Can You Check Your Risks