Let's say you start taking niacin, and your triglycerides + LDL drop, and your HDL rises. Then you stay on niacin for several months. What happens when you come off of it? Will there be a "rebound" effect that is detrimental?
Let's say you start taking niacin, and your triglycerides + LDL drop, and your HDL rises. Then you stay on niacin for several months. What happens when you come off of it? Will there be a "rebound" effect that is detrimental?
Let's say you start taking niacin, and your triglycerides + LDL drop, and your HDL rises. Then you stay on niacin for several months. What happens when you come off of it? Will there be a "rebound" effect that is detrimental?
New JNC is going to say Niacin blows anyway, and we should stop using it. more data points to non-hdl cholesterol as the target. To specifcally answer your question (and to intentionally bury it in this paragraph), once you start a lipid lowering agent, you are stuck on it, to remove it takes you back towards where you started, unless you are a hippie and believe diet and exercise actually works for more than 10 or 15 points of LDL.
The only thing you need to know for step 1 is "HDL up" and "flushing, take aspirin."