David Sinclair· PhD
The risk of heart disease may start to rise at 30 mg/dl (about 75 nmol/L), and it rises more steeply at levels of 50 mg/dL (about 125 nmol/L) and higher. An estimated one in seven people are at or above this threshold.
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
The risk of heart disease may start to rise at 30 mg/dl (about 75 nmol/L), and it rises more steeply at levels of 50 mg/dL (about 125 nmol/L) and higher. An estimated one in seven people are at or above this threshold.
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for that test we like to see people less than 50 nano mole per liter when people are sort of fifty to a hundred I put them in kind of a gray area when people are over a hundred or certainly over 125 an animal per liter that's when I start to get worried
one in 10 people roughly show up with an elevated lp little a but the number by itself doesn't tell you how bad of a problem it is
if you're listening to this podcast there's a at least a 10 and maybe a 20 chance that your lp little a is elevated you really need to demand that your physician checks this level we think that the milligram per deciliter mass measurement is