Diabetes
and cholesterol
What
many people don't know is that if you have diabetes,
you can't play by the same rules as everyone else.
When it comes to cholesterol, what's considered
"low enough" for someone without diabetes is still
considered "too high" for someone with diabetes.
So you may need to work even harder at lowering
your numbers.
High
cholesterol levels are as serious as high blood
pressure, whether you are diabetic or non-diabetic.
Heart disease and stroke, both of which have been
linked to high cholesterol in both men and women,
are two of the leading causes of death for diabetics.
What
is cholesterol?
Cholesterol
is effectively blood fat that comes in two major
forms. These are High Density Lipoprotein (HDL)
and Low Density Lipoprotein (LDL), two very different
things. HDL is usually referred to as ‘good
cholesterol’, and actually serves to protect
the heart from developing problems. Amongst diabetics,
the function of this type of protein is often reduced.
LDL is bad cholesterol, because it gathers in the
blood vessels. Amongst diabetics, this is a more
likely occurrence.
What
is total cholesterol?
Total
cholesterol is a figure gleaned by testing the levels
of both HDL and LDL cholesterol within a diabetic
patient’s body.
I
am a diabetic, when should I be tested for cholesterol?
Healthcare
officials advise that total cholesterol and a specific
HDL cholesterol test should be performed as often
as once every year. It is very difficult to measure
LDL cholesterol, but amongst most patients the other
two tests will give an accurate diagnosis.