Penn Cardiac Care Newsletter
 

November 2005

Lipids: Common Risk, Extraordinary Care at Penn
UPHS Breaks Ground on Center for Advanced Medicine
Penn Cardiologists Win Awards
Heart Tip of the Month
Recipe: Spicy Green Beans

Lipids: Common Risk, Extraordinary Care at Penn

Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States. Over 500,000 Americans die from heart disease every year.

Among the most common risk factors for heart disease are cholesterol problems, often referred to as “lipid disorders.” Lipid disorders include high LDL (or “bad cholesterol”), low HDL (or “good cholesterol”), and high triglycerides. Lipid disorders often require specialized treatment by experts familiar with their management.

Penn offers the region’s largest and most well known program for the diagnosis and management of lipid disorders. The lipid disorders program is part of a larger preventive cardiovascular medicine program designed to benefit patients who have existing heart or cardiovascular disease, or who are at high risk of developing cardiovascular disease.

This program offers a multidisciplinary approach to help you assess, manage and reduce your risk for heart disease and stroke. Using specially designed tests and active medical management, our team of physicians, nurses and health care professionals accurately determine your risk and guide you toward a medical program to reduce your risk.

The Penn Preventive Cardiovascular Medicine and Lipid Disorders Program is designed to benefit patients who have existing heart or cardiovascular disease, or who are at high risk of cardiovascular disease due to:

  • Family history of heart disease, stroke, or cardiovascular disease
  • High LDL cholesterol
  • High triglycerides
  • Low HDL cholesterol
  • High blood pressure
  • Diabetes, glucose intolerance, or “metabolic syndrome”
  • Obesity

Our services include:

  • Detailed cardiovascular risk assessment
  • Detailed analysis and diagnosis of lipid disorders
  • Expertise in the use of other blood tests to identify persons at high risk for heart disease and stroke
  • Expertise in the use of non-invasive tests, such as Electron Beam CT and Multislice CT scanning for the determination of cardiovascular risk
  • In-depth personal nutrition counseling by a registered dietician
  • Review and consideration of potential non-prescription therapies
  • Comprehensive individual programs designed to fit patient's lifestyle
  • Expert advice regarding the use of lipid modifying medications when needed
  • Access to clinical trials of the newest agents for lipid disorders and prevention of cardiovascular disease

Penn’s Lipid Disorders Program is available at two sites:

Penn Presbyterian Medical Center:

Pennsylvania Hospital:


Reviewed by: Daniel Rader, MD, and Robert B. Norris, MD
Date: October 2005


Daniel J. Rader, MD, is an associate professor of medicine, pathology, and pharmacology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. He is also the director of Preventive Cardiovascular Medicine and the Lipid Clinic and associate director of the General Clinical Research Center. Dr. Rader received his medical degree from the Medical College of Pennsylvania and completed his internship and residency in internal medicine at Yale-New Haven Hospital. He was chief resident in internal medicine at Yale.

Dr. Rader’s basic research laboratory focuses on genetic and pharmacologic regulation of lipoprotein metabolism and atherosclerosis. He directs a translational research program focusing on human genetics of lipid disorders and atherosclerosis, and novel approaches to treatment of dyslipidemia and regression of atherosclerosis.


Robert Norris, MD, is clinical assistant professor and attending physician at Pennsylvania Hospital. He is also co-director of the Center for Cardiovascular Health and Lipid Disorders at Pennsylvania Hospital, and has special interests in HDL cholesterol, and in the relationships between lipid abnormalities and familial predisposition to coronary artery disease.

Dr. Norris is an invasive and non-invasive cardiologist, performing cardiac catheterizations as well as echocardiograms and transesophogeal echocardiograms. He received his medical degree from New York University Medical School and completed his internship and residency at the University of Washington Hospital. He is a fellow of the American College of Cardiology and a member of the National Lipid Association.

 


 

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