Fibrinogens are the proteins involved in blood clotting and plaque formation.
Elevated fibrinogen levels may be treated with niacin, flaxseed oil and garlic.
Homeocysteine also is involved in plaque formation.
Risk of developing coronary artery disease increases as blood cholesterol levels increase. When combined with other factors, the risk is even greater.
High blood pressure makes the heart work harder, and with time, weakens it. When combined with obesity , smoking, high cholesterol levels, or diabetes, the risk of heart attack or stroke increases.
High homocysteine levels may be treated with vitamin B6, B12 and folic acid.
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High homocysteine levels may be treated with antioxidants, vitamins C and E, selenium, Ginkgo biloba, bilberry, and hawthorn, can help prevent arterial injury forming plaque deposits.
According to the American Heart Association, up to four million Americans may have silent ischemia and be at high risk of having a heart attack with no warning.
Intestinal ischemia is indirectly due to heredity. The condition is caused by the narrowing or blocking of an artery, and one of the reasons this may happen is due to cholesterol buildup. Since high cholesterol is at least partly due to heredity, intestinal ischemia can be thought of as inheritable.
A BMI of 26.3 means your overweight and not obese, HDL is good cholesterol and LDL is considered the bad one. There weren't any concrete evidence that high levels of CRP is a risk factor in CHD though CRP levels are usually high on CHD cases.
Some common features of an economic depression include high levels of unemployment and high levels of foreclosures. The high levels of unemployment are indirectly responsible for many of the foreclosures. Another factor in foreclosures is the expiration of first-time buyer tax credits.
high levels of American productivity.