Overview
What are triglycerides?
Triglycerides are a type
of fat found in your blood. They are a major source of energy and the most
common type of fat in your body.
When you eat, your body uses the
calories it needs for quick energy. Any extra calories are turned into
triglycerides and stored in fat cells to be used
later. The excess calories are stored as fat regardless of what kind of food
you eat—fat, carbohydrate, or protein. If you regularly eat more calories than
you burn, you may have high triglycerides.
In normal amounts,
triglycerides are important to good health. When triglyceride levels are high,
it is not clear whether these high levels directly increase your risk for heart
disease. But high triglycerides are often part of a group of conditions called
metabolic syndrome.
Metabolic syndrome
is the combination of high blood pressure, high blood sugar, too much fat
around the waist, low HDL ("good") cholesterol, and high triglycerides. This
syndrome does increase your risk for heart disease as well as for diabetes and
stroke.
Triglycerides are measured as part of a blood test that
measures your
cholesterol. Normal triglyceride levels are below 150.
High levels are 200 or above.
What causes high triglycerides?
Conditions that
may cause high triglycerides include:
- Obesity.
- Poorly controlled
diabetes.
- An underactive thyroid (hypothyroidism).
- Kidney
disease.
- Regularly eating more calories than you burn.
- Drinking a lot of alcohol.
Certain medicines may also raise triglycerides. These
medicines include:
Certain types of high cholesterol and high triglycerides
are caused by genetics.
What are the symptoms?
High triglycerides usually
do not cause symptoms.
Sometimes high triglycerides have a
genetic cause. But this is not common. In this case, high triglyceride levels
may occur along with visible fatty deposits under the skin called
xanthomas.
In rare cases, people who have very high levels of
triglycerides may develop inflammation of the
pancreas (pancreatitis).
This can cause sudden, severe abdominal pain, loss of appetite, nausea,
vomiting, and fever.
How can you lower your high triglycerides?
If you
are overweight, losing weight may be the best way to lower triglycerides. You
may be able to lower your triglycerides by eating fewer calories and increasing
your activity. Other diet changes that might help include limiting fats and
sugars, and limiting or not drinking alcohol.
If increasing your
activity and watching calories do not work, you may also need medicine.
Medicines called statins are commonly used to lower LDL ("bad") cholesterol.
But drugs called nicotinic acid (or niacin) and fibrates seem to work better
for lowering triglycerides. If you have high triglycerides, high LDL
cholesterol, and low HDL ("good") cholesterol, you may take more than one type
of medicine that lowers cholesterol.
Frequently Asked
Questions
Learning about high
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treatment: | |
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