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Hyperlipidemia is a family of disorders that are characterized by abnormally high levels of lipids (fats) in the blood. While fats play a vital role in the body's metabolic processes, high blood levels of fats increase the risk of coronary heart disease (CHD). Two common lipid abnormalities are characterized either by high blood cholesterol levels (hypercholesterolemia) or high blood levels of triglycerides (hypertriglyceridemia). Cholesterol is manufactured primarily in the liver and then carried in the bloodstream by low density lipoprotein (LDL). (Because cholesterol and other fats do not dissolve in water, they cannot travel through the blood unaided. Lipoproteins are particles formed in the liver to transport cholesterol and other fats through the bloodstream.) Cholesterol is returned to the liver from other body cells by another lipoprotein, high density lipoprotein (HDL). From there, cholesterol is secreted into the bile, either unchanged or after conversion to bile acids.
Cholesterol is essential for the formation of cell membranes and the manufacture of several hormones, but it is not required from the diet because the liver produces all the cholesterol the body needs. If blood cholesterol levels are elevated, large amounts of LDL (so-called "bad") cholesterol can deposit in the arterial walls. These deposits represent the first stage in the narrowing of arteries, termed atherosclerosis. Because hypercholesterolemia causes no symptoms, preventive measures and regular measurement of cholesterol levels are important for people in high-risk categories. Hypercholesterolemia is especially dangerous when HDL ("good") cholesterol levels are low. Left untreated, hypercholesterolemia can eventually lead to a heart attack due to CHD or a stroke due to narrowed arteries supplying the brain.
Hypertriglyceridemia is characterized by high blood levels of triglycerides, which are the body's main source of stored energy. Like cholesterol, triglycerides are obtained from food and manufactured in the liver. Also like cholesterol, triglycerides require lipoproteins for their transport in the blood. Most of the triglycerides in blood are carried by very low density lipoprotein (VLDL); dietary triglycerides are carried from the intestine on other lipoproteins called chylomicrons. Elevations in blood triglycerides may promote atherosclerosis by alteringthe size, density, and composition of LDL. In addition, very high blood triglyceride levels can lead to inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis). Treatment of hyperlipidemia involves reducing lipid levels through lifestyle measures and, if necessary, medications to lower the risk of CHD andstroke.
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Content excerpted from Johns Hopkins Symptoms and Remedies: The Complete Home Medical Reference.