blumoonrisen
Well-Known Member
The cardio in hospital didn't have a clue bout me. I only spoke to him once when he came into the ward on his rounds. When I asked him bout my cholesterol he had to go and check.If I was you I'd ask my GP if I was right to ignore the cardiologist.
You've already had a heart attack and now a stent fitted so there is something maybe underlying that caused this serious condition.
Cholestral isn't just as simple saying "it's 4.7 so all is well" for example what was your triglycerides reading ?
Low-density lipoprotein could've also been high.
- Triglycerides(another type of fat related to cholesterol):
- Desirable: Less than 149 mg/dL; ideal is under 100 mg/dL.
- High: 200 mg/dL or higher; 500 mg/dL is considered very high.
Maybe your cardiologist saw a trend that he's seen a thousand times before so advocated statins for long term health, as you get older everything deteriorates and maybe he's thinking of you in the long term.
Medicine isn't DIY or Dr Google. There is so much more to it and cardiologists are sometimes not that good at explaining why they do something, but remember these people see a shit load of patients every week with mostly similar problems so there advice shouldn't just be ignored.
Speak with your GP about it.
He looked fresh out of Uni and had nothing worthwhile to say.
As for GP's I don't even have one.
After never needed to see one for 30 yrs, I had to get in touch after my heart attack. I was then informed I was out of the area and they couldn't keep me on their books anymore. Happy to keep me on and take the payments when I didn't need them.
So I've never had a check up or seen a GP since getting out of hospital nearly 3yrs ago..!
That's the state of our NHS.
Like I said, I'm fine and I do my own checks and have changed my lifestyle, the heart attack was a warning to do so.