There are many contributing factors to high cholesterol. Some you can control include the consumption of fatty foods and the amount of exercise you do. There are also uncontrollable factors such as age, sex and any hereditary conditions.
High cholesterol levels, and not enough exercise.
Foods are a common source of cholesterol, especially eggs. A diet rich in cholesterol can lead to high levels of it.
The links between cholesterol levels and diet are that when you eat foods with high cholesterol levels this causes a build up of cholesterol in your blood and in your body as your body can only support so much.
No, since platelets don't have anything to do with regulation of cholesterol levels in the blood. Cholesterol levels are related to lipoproteins, not platelets
Having angina can be very serious. Major causes of angina is smoking, high fat and cholesterol diet, high cholesterol levels, high blood pressure and high blood sugar levels. A way to keep from getting it is a healthy diet and exercise.
No, since platelets don't have anything to do with regulation of cholesterol levels in the blood. Cholesterol levels are related to lipoproteins, not platelets
No and Yes. The amount of fats is the determinant factor in this case. The body actually needs two forms of energy to operate properly. These are sugar and fats. Cholesterol challenges show up mainly when the sugar level in the system is higher than what the body actually needs. This results in excess fats being stored in different parts of the body. If you do not make use of the excess fat through one form of exercise or the other, such a situation naturally leads to weight gain and a fatty body system. The issue is not just about fat alone but how much of it is properly consumed.
Blood Cholesterol levels are dependent on many factors of which antigen 'a' is one. Antigen 'a' is present only in blood groups A and AB. Hence, blood cholesterol levels are higher in individuals with blood groups A and AB.
cholesterol
cholesterol block the blood track in circulatory systems
Blood type does not affect cholesterol levels. Heredity, eating low-fat foods, and exercise all do affect cholesterol levels.
No, coffee and Splenda will not affect cholesterol levels.