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What is Familial Hypercholesterolemia?
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Familial Hypercholesterolemia (FH) is an inherited disorder that causes very high cholesterol levels and greatly increases the chance of having a heart attack early in life. Heart attacks usually occur in men when they are 40-55 years old and in women when they are 50-65 years old. Unfortunately, they can sometimes occur when people are in their mid-twenties. The first case of FH was described over 100 years ago and characteristics of FH passing from generation to generation was understood in the late 1930's. Actual genetic proof was discovered in the 1960's and 1970's.
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Cholesterol is removed from the blood by the liver using Low Density Lipoprotein (LDL) receptors. Each person has two genes that are responsible for making the LDL receptors: one received from the father and one received from the mother. In a person with FH, an abnormal gene was passed on from one parent. Therefore, half of the LDL receptors are absent or do not work properly and the other half are normal. Because half of the receptors do not remove the cholesterol normally, cholesterol levels increase in the blood. this results in damage to blood vessels, blockage of arteries and heart attacks at an early age.
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If a person has normal cholesterol levels at birth, he or she will never develop FH later in life nor will he or she pass the gene on to their children. If a person has FH, then each of his or her children will have a 50% chance of inheriting FH. You are either born with FH or not. Cholesterol levels can be checked at birth. Most persons with the disease are neither recognized nor treated.
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