Skip banner links and go to contentU.S. Department of Health & Human Services * National Institutes of Health
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute:  Diseases and Conditions Index
Tell us what you think about this site
  Enter keywords to search this site. (Click here for Search Tips)  
U.S. Department of Health & Human Services National Institutes of Health Diseases and Conditions Index NIH Home NHLBI Home About This Site NHLBI Home NHLBI Home Link to Spanish DCI Tell us what you think
 DCI Home: Heart & Vascular Diseases: High Blood Cholesterol: Causes

      High Blood Cholesterol
Skip navigation and go to content
What Is ...
Other Names
Causes
Signs & Symptoms
Diagnosis
Treatments
Key Points
Links
 

What Causes High Blood Cholesterol?

A variety of things can affect the cholesterol levels in your blood. Some of these things you can control and others you cannot.

You can control:

  • What you eat. Certain foods have types of fat that raise your cholesterol level.
    • Saturated fat raises your low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol level more than anything else in your diet.
    • Trans fatty acids (trans fats) are made when vegetable oil is hydrogenated to harden it. Trans fatty acids also raise cholesterol levels.
    • Cholesterol is found in foods that come from animal sources, for example, egg yolks, meat, and cheese.
  • Your weight. Being overweight tends to increase your LDL level, lower your high-density lipoprotein (HDL) level, and increase your total cholesterol level.
  • Your activity. Lack of regular exercise can lead to weight gain, which could raise your LDL cholesterol level. Regular exercise can help you lose weight and lower your LDL level. It can also help you raise your HDL level.

You cannot control:

  • Heredity. High blood cholesterol can run in families. An inherited genetic condition (familial hypercholesterolemia) results in very high LDL cholesterol levels. It begins at birth, and may result in a heart attack at an early age.
  • Age and sex. Starting at puberty, men have lower levels of HDL than women. As women and men get older, their LDL cholesterol levels rise. Younger women have lower LDL cholesterol levels than men, but after age 55, women have higher levels than men.

Other NamesPrevious  NextSigns and Symptoms


Email this Page Email all Sections Print all Sections Print all Sections of this Topic


Skip bottom navigation and go back to top
Department of Health and Human Services National Institutes of Health National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
Blood Diseases | Heart and Blood Vessel Diseases | Lung Diseases | Sleep Disorders
NHLBI Privacy Statement | NHLBI Accessibility Policy
NIH Home | NHLBI Home | DCI Home | About DCI | Search
About NHLBI | Contact NHLBI

Note to users of screen readers and other assistive technologies: please report your problems here.