The Effects of High Cholesterol on the Body
Cholesterol is a waxy substance found in your blood and in your
cells. Your liver makes most of the cholesterol in your body. The rest
comes from foods you eat. Cholesterol travels in your blood bundled up
in packets called lipoproteins.
Cholesterol comes in two forms:
Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) is the “bad,”
unhealthy kind of cholesterol. LDL cholesterol can build up in your
arteries and form fatty, waxy deposits called plaques.
High-density lipoprotein (HDL) is the “good,”
healthy kind of cholesterol. It transports excess cholesterol out of
your arteries to your liver, which removes it from your body.
Cholesterol itself isn’t bad. Your body needs some cholesterol to
make hormones, vitamin D, and digestive fluids. Cholesterol also helps
your organs function properly.
Yet having too much LDL cholesterol can be a problem. High
cholesterol over time can damage your arteries, contribute to heart
disease, and increase your risk for a stroke. Getting your cholesterol
checked at regular doctor visits and lowering levels with diet,
exercise, and medicines can help prevent these and other complications.
Cardiovascular and circulatory systems
When you have too much LDL cholesterol in your body it can build
up in your arteries, clogging them and making them less flexible.
Hardening of the arteries is called atherosclerosis. Blood doesn’t flow
as well through stiff arteries, so your heart has to work harder to push
blood through them. As plaque builds up in your arteries, over time you
can develop heart disease.
Plaque buildup in coronary arteries can disrupt the flow of
oxygen-rich blood to your heart muscle. This may cause chest pain called
angina. Angina isn’t a heart attack, but it can warn that you’re at
risk for a heart attack. A piece of plaque can eventually break off and
form a clot, which can block blood flow to your heart, leading to a
heart attack, or to your brain, leading to a stroke.
Plaque can also block the flow of blood to arteries that supply
blood to your arms, stomach, legs, and feet. This is called peripheral
arterial disease (PAD).
Endocrine system
Your body’s hormone-producing glands use cholesterol to make
hormones such as estrogen, testosterone, and cortisol. Hormones can also
have an effect on your body’s cholesterol levels. Some research has
found that as estrogen levels rise during a woman’s menstrual cycle.
HDL cholesterol levels also go up, and LDL cholesterol levels decline.
This may be one reason why a woman’s risk for heart disease increases
after menopause, when estrogen levels drop.
Lowered production of thyroid hormone (hypothyroidism) leads to an
increase in total and LDL cholesterol. Excess thyroid hormone
(hyperthyroidism) has the opposite effect. Androgen deprivation therapy,
which reduces levels of male hormones to stop prostate cancer growth,
can raise LDL cholesterol and lower HDL cholesterol levels. A deficiency
of growth hormone can also raise LDL cholesterol levels.
Nervous system
Cholesterol is an essential component of the human brain. In fact, the brain contains about 20 percent
of the body’s entire supply of cholesterol. This fat is essential for
the development and protection of nerve cells, which enable the brain to
communicate with the rest of the body.
While you need some cholesterol for your brain to function
optimally, too much of it can be damaging. Excess cholesterol can lead
to strokes — a disruption in blood flow that can damage parts of the
brain, leading to loss of memory, movement, and other functions.
High blood cholesterol on its own has also been implicated in the
loss of memory and mental function. Having high blood cholesterol
accelerates the formation of beta-amyloid plaques, the sticky protein
deposits that damage the brain in people with Alzheimer’s disease.
Digestive system
In the digestive system, cholesterol is essential for the
production of bile — a substance that helps your body break down foods
and absorb nutrients in your intestines. But if you have too much
cholesterol in your bile, the excess forms into crystals, and then hard
stones in your gallbladder. Gallstones can be very painful.
Keeping an eye on your cholesterol level
with regular blood tests will help you catch — and treat — any issues
before they can lead to heart disease or other complications.
High cholesterol level can slow down digestive functions
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