The treatment for angina pectoris is multifactorial. All modifiable risk factors need to be addressed, such as the cholesterol level, high blood pressure issues, obesity, and smoking—all of which will worsen the progression of the disease. Antiplatelet drugs should be given on a regular basis, such as aspirin, ticagrelor, prasugrel, or clopidogrel. Symptom control should be used on an intermittent basis, such as nitroglycerin or calcium channel blockers. Things that will help lessen disease progression are ACE inhibitors for blood pressure and statin drugs for hyperlipidemia. The severely affected patient might need revascularization if medical therapy fails.
HYPERLIPIDEMIA Hyperlipidemia is a major cause of cardiovascular disease, which is why all heart patients are good candidates for treatment of dyslipidemia. Remember that dyslipidemia can be related to an elevated total or LDL cholesterol, an elevated triglyceride level, or a low HDL level. Any of these will lead to atherosclerosis, which is the most common cause of the different types of heart disease. People can have primary or secondary dyslipidemia, with primary dyslipidemia being genetic in nature. Labs will have a breakdown of what constitutes and elevated lipid situation but, in reality, there is no real cutoff involved where the risk for heart disease does not exist. People with other risk factors require much lower levels of cholesterol compared to those who have no other risk factors. Dyslipidemias are classified by an increase in cholesterol only, an increase in triglycerides only, or increases in both cholesterol and triglyceride levels. This doesn’t take into account that their might be a low HDL situation as well. Most primary dyslipidemias are either single gene or multiple gene mutations affecting the production or clearance of cholesterol or triglycerides. These tend to run in families. In some cases, being a heterozygote for a single-gene disorder leads to a moderate increase in heart disease risk but being a homozygote is associated with a high risk of early heart disease. Among secondary causes of dyslipidemia, one of the more common ones is living a sedentary lifestyle with a high calorie, high-fat diet. Other causes include chronic kidney
16