Thank you for your help I was very worried and this has me well relieved, I am morbidly obese, 5'10" 305lb's I have had very high triglycerides and cohlesterol. I am diabetic and have been hospitalized with pancreatitis in the past due to high triglycerides. I am on lopid now and numbers are below 200 for both and im dieting have lost 16 pounds so far this month so im doing what i can excersise is very hard for me i suffer from severe spinal stenosis as well as difuse osteo arthritis.. and degenerative hip disease.. but ill keep workin on it... again thank you for your help...
As Jon stated >70% is AHA guidelines for intervention if there are symptoms (usually chest pain with exertion but with rest quick relief). IF A 40% BLOCKADE and PAIN a stent may be the solution.
Frankly, I do't believe the partial occlusion is THE problem. There may be other heart and/or pulmonary issues.
I don't believe they normally treat blockages of 40% by stent or surgery, I thought that the threshhold is usually around 70%. There are others more knowlegable about this than me on this forum with more experience and hopefully they will respond as well, like Jack54, Flycaster or kenkeith. The fact that you have a blockage means you are building up plaque and the risk factor that is causing that needs to be controlled. Do you smoke, have high cholesterol, high blood pressure or are you overweight? These are the main things you can control. You need to see a doctor or cardiologist to get the best course of action.
Good Luck,
Jon
I don't believe they normally treat blockages of 40% by stent or surgery, I thought that the threshhold is usually around 70%. There are others more knowlegable about this than me on this forum with more experience and hopefully they will respond as well, like Jack54, Flycaster or kenkeith. The fact that you have a blockage means you are building up plaque and the risk factor that is causing that needs to be controlled. Do you smoke, have high cholesterol, high blood pressure or are you overweight? These are the main things you can control. You need to see a doctor or cardiologist to get the best course of action.
Good Luck,
Jon