Brooks,
What does Dr. L. say about your cholesterol levels? What are your levels? Mine, since I quite Zocor, are the best they have ever been. They are in the "normal range." (Actually they were always well within a normal healthy range based on the real science, but now are even in the acceptable range based on a statinator's brainwashed science).
tchrmgr,
Who says your numbers are "very, very high"? What are your numbers? Also, who says there is heart disease in your family? I was asked eight years ago if there was heart disease in my famly. I thought a bit and said, "Yes, my grandfather died of a heart attack."
Let me "paraphrase" the response I got while my test results were being examined while i was questioned:
"Well Now, there you go!! Let's start you out on excercise and diet changes right away, unless, of course, you want to just skip that part of the conjob since the exercise does basically nothing and the diet we are going to give you -- the typical low fat, high carb diet we all recommend -- will actually INCREASE your cholesterol numbers and make your overall colesterol profile worse. What ya say? Want to just skip that BS? Good, let's start you off on 20 mg of Lipitor. You're healthy as an ox. You should be able to take it just fine and then we'll double it the next time you come in because with the number of eggs you eat, your numbers will not budge one bit regardless of what the Lipitor will do in cutting your own cholestrol production!"
Now keep in mind that I was NEVER asked at what age he died of a heart attack. The science says that this is a meaningful indicator for others in the family if someone died at age 50 or below! (Sounds like your parents don't quite qualify very well on that count.) It makes me wonder if they had known he was 106 years of age at the time he died whether that might have made any difference to them? Probably not. They heard what they wanted hear, right? Would it have also made any difference if they had known that he was a heavy cigar smoker since the time he was 14? Who knows. Probably not. Without the cigars, he might have still died early with a heart attack at age 125? Who knows.
I hope I have made the point. Now for the real facts that are not quite so mindnumbing. I have no idea when he started smoking cigars. I never saw him without one. I will ask my dad if he knows. And he did not die at 106, it was 79. He was in excellent health and worked a full day that day in a suit and tie, came home, took a nap and never woke up. Now that I think about it, it may not have even been a heart attack. Who knows. That was what was put on his death certificate. Actually it would be just as likely that it was a stroke. I do not know if an autopsy was done. Another question for my parents. But consider this: that was in 1972. Thirty-six years ago. My guess is that he lived LONGER than the average man at that time, and probably outlived my doctor's dad's father. (I am about five years older than my doctor.) My doctor is not on statins. I plan to put him on them though. What? That sounds confusing? It shouldn't. After all, who is the doctor? Him or me? I have lower cholesterol numbers from being a member of this board for two years than I ever had under his care with 40 mg of Zocor per day. See what I mean? Looks like he and his patients need to be seeing me, not him. See what I mean? He'll understand that, right? So I plan to start him off at 20 mg of Lipitor, but it will likely be going up, I'm sure. Just got a feeling about that. (I have a diet for him too.) But like I did, he is to keep up his heavy aerobic work outs. He is a marathon runner. I was more into two mile "sprints" at the time of my melt down. This prescription of mine will save lives. Particularly when, as an experiment, I put him on doxycycline for two weeks. Once he gets the picture, he can tell other doctors. And they can learn from him. And more people will not only live longer, they will have a higher quality of life while they are at it. That's just me, I guess. Always looking out for others.
Biologist