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Statins: Are these cholesterol-lowering drugs right for you?

Lifestyle is still key for preventing heart disease

Lifestyle changes are essential for reducing your risk of heart disease, whether you take a statin or not. To reduce your risk:

  • Quit smoking and avoid secondhand smoke
  • Eat a healthy diet that's low in saturated fat, trans fat, refined carbohydrates and salt, and rich in fruits, vegetables, fish, and whole grains.
  • Be physically active, sit less and exercise regularly
  • Maintain a healthy waist girth: less than 40 inches in men and less than 35 inches in women

If you're following the recommended lifestyle behaviors but your cholesterol — particularly your LDL (bad) cholesterol — remains high, statins might be an option for you. Risk factors for heart disease and stroke are:

  • Smoking
  • High cholesterol
  • High blood pressure
  • Diabetes
  • Being overweight or obese
  • Family history of heart disease, especially if it was before the age of 55 in male relatives or before 65 in female relatives
  • Not exercising
  • Poor stress and anger management
  • Older age
  • Narrowing of the arteries in your neck, arms or legs (peripheral artery disease)