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SingleCareHere is What Your Cholesterol Should Be at Each Age


Understanding cholesterol levels across different age groups enables physicians to better assess cardiovascular risk and implement appropriate interventions. This comprehensive overview examines age-specific cholesterol targets, testing frequencies, and management strategies, incorporating guidance from leading cardiology experts and organizations.

Key Points:

  • Total cholesterol targets remain consistent for adults (optimal: 125-200 mg/dL), while LDL targets vary based on risk factors – less than 100 mg/dL for those without risk factors and less than 70 mg/dL for high-risk patients with previous cardiovascular events
  • HDL targets differ by sex: optimal levels are >40 mg/dL for adult males and >50 mg/dL for adult females, with higher levels providing increased cardiovascular protection
  • Testing frequency recommendations: initial screening between ages 9-11, every 5 years for young adults, every 1-2 years for men >45 and women >55, with more frequent monitoring for those with risk factors
  • Primary risk factors include unhealthy diet, sedentary lifestyle, family history, underlying conditions (Type 2 diabetes, obesity, familial hypercholesterolemia), and smoking
  • First-line intervention focuses on lifestyle modifications through Mediterranean-style diet and regular exercise (40 minutes of brisk activity, 4 days/week), followed by statin therapy when indicated

“For most people, regardless of what you do, LDL cholesterol tends to go up as you age.”
– Samuel Kim, MD, Director of Preventive Cardiology at New York-Presbyterian Weill Cornell Medical Center


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